Faculty FAQs
Get all the answers to some of the most often asked questions related to teaching with Rose Library.
Get all the answers to some of the most often asked questions related to teaching with Rose Library.
Use our online form to request a tour for your group, family or class! We offer tours of our exhibits, as well as general tours of Rose Library or "show and tells" of collection materials. K-12 classes are welcome.
The Emory Oral History Program (EOHP) practices oral history as a humanistic method of discovery that incorporates technology and archival practices with the goal of better understanding the communities we live in.
The Rose Library's LGBTQ political collections document the work of activists, organizations, and trailblazing political figures to achieve equality. The social and cultural collections include the personal papers of artists and writers as well as the records of social organizations and businesses. It also includes rare books, pamphlets, and periodicals written by and for the LGBTQ community.
In 2001, Emory University partnered with Boston College to create the Irish Literary Collections Portal through a generous grant provided by the Gladys Krieble Delmas Foundation. The portal provided access to the finding aids of over 100 of North America's Irish literary manuscript collections, bringing together finding aids from multiple institutions into a single searchable database.
Emory University administrative units, schools, and departments wishing to deposit records in the Archives will follow the framework below to arrange the transfer.
The Robert Langmuir African American Photograph Collection has been digitized in its entirety and is available for individual use, study and research. This extensive collection contains more than 12,000 photographs depicting African American life from as early as the 1840s through the 1970s.
Camille Billops and James V. Hatch donated to Emory University their collection of research materials on African American visual and performing arts. Assembled over the past forty years, this is one of the premier collections of its kind. The Billops-Hatch Archives provides a major resource for research in African American arts and letters of the 20th century.