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Library Exhibits

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  • Bridging Communities: 50 Years of Collecting at GSU
  • Protests for Change in Atlanta
    • Racial Tensions on Campus in 1992
    • Atlanta Symphony Orchestra Petition Campaign
    • AFSCME Atlanta Local 1644 Protest
    • Women's March
  • Community Building through Media Outlets
    • Great Speckled Bird Newspaper
    • Radio Broadcasting
    • The Signal’s Role in Forming Institutional Identity
    • The LGBTQ Institute’s Mike Maloney OutTV Atlanta Video Collection
  • Stronger Together
    • National Domestic Workers
    • International Association of Machinists
  • Making Herstory
    • Admission of Women to the Evening School of Commerce
    • Documenting the Equal Rights Amendment through the Georgia Women’s Movement Project
    • Georgia LGBTQ History Project
  • Organizations Supporting the Marginalized
    • Metro Atlanta Task Force for the Homeless
    • People with AIDS
      • AID Atlanta
      • Jerusalem House & Joining Hearts
      • Fundraising for People with AIDS
    • Incarcerated Women: Foreverfamily
    • Battered Women
  • Support Our Work: The Dr. David B. Gracy II Endowment

Community Building through Media Outlets

WSB-TV anchor

WSB-TV anchor, 1950s

Great Speckled Bird v. 1 no. 1 (March 15, 1968)

Great Speckled Bird v. 1 no. 1 (15 March 1968)

Harry Chapman in studio at WSB

Harry Chapman in studio at WSB, 1960s

Phil Schaefer presenting the WSB High School Reporter Award

Phil Schaefer presenting the WSB High School Reporter Award, 1970s

“Greetings. We’re here…as they say, to do our thing. Which being: to bitch and badger, carp and cry, and perhaps give Atlanta (and its environs, ‘cause we’re growing, baby) a bit of honest and interesting, and we trust, even readable journalism.” – Tom Coffin, Vol. 1, Issue 1 The Great Speckled Bird  

Media serves as a first draft of history, recording and making sense of events as they happen. Local media outlets offer a unique opportunity for individuals to report, record, and express their opinions on events affecting their communities. Community-based media outlets can articulate interesting counternarratives, reflecting conflicts and unique local interests that would otherwise be lost in the broader stories of history. 

From its beginnings, Special Collections acquired community-based publications. In the twenty-first century, we began to digitize our media holdings and make them available anywhere. The voices of these individuals who reported, recorded, and expressed their opinions are an important part of our collections. They help us to understand how events affected people, and how communication formed communities.   

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Community Building through Media Outlets

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