Posts by Julie Golia

Doc Chat Forty-Five: A Guide to Black Travel Guides

Schomburg Center librarian Rhonda Evans and NYPL curator Julie Golia analyzed travel guides used by African Americans to help them navigate the experience of travel during the early and mid 20th century.

Doc Chat Forty-Four: Alice Austen's New York Street Types

NYPL’s Elizabeth Cronin spoke with art historian Bonnie Yochelson about the career and images of understudied Staten Island photographer Alice Austen.

Doc Chat Forty-Three: Social Networks of Photographers, Curators, and Critics during the Photo Boom of the 1970s

In this episode, NYPL's Zulay Chang and photography scholar Dr. Tal-Or Ben-Choreen explored Mike Mandel’s 1975 series Baseball-Photographer Trading Cards and the way it provides insight into the networking that occurred between photographers, curators, and critics during the 1970s.

Doc Chat Forty-Two: The Brooklyn Battery Bridge and the Fight to Save New York

In this episode, NYPL curators Ian Fowler and Julie Golia examined maps proposing the construction of the Brooklyn Battery Bridge, a development project that would have decimated the built environments of downtown Manhattan and South Brooklyn, and that helped spark the city's modern preservation movement.

Doc Chat Episode Forty-One: Photographing the Rise and Fall of the Lower East Side's Synagogues

Lyudmila Sholokhova and Vladimir Levin discussed the photographer's role in documenting these institutions from their heyday to their decline in the 1960s and 1970s, when many were repurposed or demolished.

Doc Chat Episode Forty: Columbus’s 1493 Letter on His First Voyage, Teaching a Troubled Treasure

In this episode, two NYPL curators discussed the origins, content, distribution, and legacy of a 1493 letter from Christopher Columbus and offered innovative ideas on how to incorporate the document into teaching about the origins of colonialism in the Americas.

Doc Chat Episode Thirty-Nine: Picturing the Subway in 1970s New York

In this episode Julie Golia and Kim Phillips-Fein explored a collection of evocative photographs of the New York City subway system in the 1970s by Alen MacWeeney, discussing what the images reveal about the city during a decade of crisis and transformation.

Doc Chat Episode 38: The Mapleson Cylinders, Listening to a Treasure

In this episode, Jonathan Hiam and Jon Samuels analyzed the Mapleson Cylinders and discussed the preservation and restoration of the many historical audio formats held by NYPL.

Doc Chat Episode Thirty-Seven: Recovering Frances Burney's Cecilia

In this episode, NYPL's Carolyn Vegan and Hilary Havens of the University of Tennessee explored the manuscripts of 18th-century English novelist Frances Burney.

Doc Chat Episode Thirty-Six: Augusta Savage's "Lift Every Voice and Sing," A Treasure of Liberation

In this episode, Doc Chatters honored the work and legacies of two Black female artists, a sculptor and a poet, across generations. 

Doc Chat Episode Thirty-Five: Photographing Migration and Ethnicity at Ellis Island

In this episode Bogdan Horbal of NYPL and Smoki Musaraj of Ohio University, discussed photographer Lewis Wickes Hine's celebration of ethnic and cultural diversity as a manifesto against rising prejudice and discrimination against specific groups of immigrants.

Doc Chat Episode Thirty-Four: Reframing Columbia Eneutseak, Decentering the Imperialist Gaze

In this episode, Doc Chat paid homage to a remarkable Inuit performer and considered how she appealed to and defied stereotypes as an Indigenous woman in modern American society.

Doc Chat Episode Thirty-Three: The 1811 Plan for Manhattan, a Treasure of the New York Public Library

In Episode Thirty-Three, NYPL’s Sara Spink and Ian Fowler discussed the 1811 Commissioners’ Map and Survey of Manhattan Island, featured in the Library’s newly opened The Polonsky Exhibition of The New York Public Library’s Treasures.

Doc Chat Episode Thirty-Two: Identity, Anti-Bias Practices, and the Library Catalog

In this episode, NYPL's Paloma Celis Carbajal and Jelicia Jimenez were joined by Bronwen Maxson of the University of Oregon to discuss how issues of identity, particularly as relates to immigrant communities in the U.S., have shaped discovery tools such as library catalogs in far-reaching ways. They also examined the role of student activism in catalyzing change.

Doc Chat Episode Thirty-One: Race and Slavery's Pandemic Legacies

In this episode, historians Michelle Commander and Christopher Willoughby discussed the racialization of disease in the late eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, analyzing a 1802 medical advice manual for treating enslaved people in the Caribbean and a 1799 pamphlet that argues that blackness (skin color) is a form of leprosy.

Doc Chat Episode Thirty: Researching Problematic Content in Pop Culture History

In this episode, NYPL's Andy McCarthy and author and journalist Mark Harris considered what it means to analyze moments in history that do not align with the social ethics, cultural standards, and popular beliefs of the current moment.

Doc Chat Episode Twenty-Nine: Pre-Revolutionary Russia Through Bolshevik Eyes

In this episode NYPL's Bogdan Horbal and Samuel Casper of Hunter College delved into Dmitrii Moor's 1919 propaganda poster Sud narodnyi (The People's Court). They offered a close analysis of the evocative imagery in the print, which is a satirical procession depicting the various strata of late Imperial Russian society swept away by the Revolutions of 1917.

Doc Chat Episode Twenty-Six: Pandemic Visions in Newspapers and Literature from Mexico

In this episode, NYPL's Paloma Celis Carbajal and Óscar A. Pérez, Assistant Professor of Spanish at Skidmore College, explored cultural expressions in Mexico during the influenza pandemics of 1918 and 2009 through newspapers and other digitized materials.

Doc Chat Episode Twenty-Seven: Exploring 1930s New York City Through Tenement Photography

In Episode Twenty-Seven, NYPL's Carmen Nigro and Annie Polland, President of the Lower East Side Tenement Museum, examined photos taken by inspectors of the New York City Tenement House Department and discussed reform, regulation, and social conditions in Depression-era NYC.

Doc Chat Episode Twenty-Five: History in the (Zine) Making

In this episode, Bridgett Pride and Kadiatou Tubman of the Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture discussed ways that they have used zines and zine-making projects to help students of all ages explore historical research, express their creativity, and envision themselves as historians.