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Natalia Fernández, Associate Professor, Curator of the Oregon Multicultural Archives and OSU Queer Archives Oregon State University
Pronouns (she/her/hers)
OSU Libraries and Press: Special Collections and Archives Research Center
natalia.fernandez@oregonstate.edu
541-737-3653
CJ Garcia was the 5th Diversity Scholar at the Oregon State University Libraries. Working primarily out of the Special Collections and Archives Research Center, he conducted a variety of projects to help enrich and sustain the Oregon Multicultural Archives and OSU Queer Archives at Oregon State University.
The Japanese-American Association of Lane County, Oregon, Oral History Collection is a collection of oral histories, digital sound files, images, videos and documents of eleven community members and influential people from Eugene, Lane County, Oregon, as well as Elkton, Douglas County, and Waldport, Lincoln County, Oregon. These oral histories document the immigrant experiences of the interviewees' parents and grandparents; their World War II experiences in the United States or in Japan, and their lives in Eugene and neighboring communities in the years following the end of the war. This collection is open for research, with materials in Japanese and English available. The collection was donated to the Special Collections and Archives Research Center by the Association in 2008, with materials gathered from 2006-2008. A major portion of the collection dates to 1994-2008.
This Oral History Collection is a component of the Oregon Multicultural Archives, a vast archive documenting cultural, ethnic and underepresented communities in Oregon. Components of the archives are available in Oregon Digital and the ScholarsArchive@OSU.The Japanese-American Association Oral History Collection is one of several oral history collections available through the University Archives.
For more information, please visit this collection's finding aid.
The Oregon State University Libraries Special Collections and Archives Research Center (SCARC) maintains and makes available the University's unique collections of manuscripts, archives, photographs, and books. Subject strengths include:
We acknowledge that materials in SCARC collections and the language that describes them may be harmful. We are actively working to address our descriptive practices; for more information please see our SCARC Anti-Racist Actions Statement.
The Special Collections and Archives Research Center public service point is located in the Reading Room on the 5th Floor of the Valley Library at Oregon State University. If you plan to visit us, please check our calendar.
See our Guide to the Special Collections and Archives Research Center for more on how to visit SCARC, find our collections, and research tips.
Due to limited staffing capacity, the Special Collections and Archives Research Center will be open by appointment only until further notice.
SCARC staff are committed to mitigating the risks associated with on-site collection consultations through a quarantine period of research materials before and after each appointment, disinfection of surfaces and high-touch points, wearing face coverings, and appropriate physical distancing.
We miss seeing you in our reading room, and while SCARC’s on-site public services are limited at this time, remote reference inquiries are being addressed to the best of our ability. There is a wealth of online content in Oregon Digital, on the SCARC website, in ScholarsArchive@OSU, in SCARC LibGuides, and on OSU MediaSpace, and public services staff are available to assist you in navigating and searching these sites.
See our Guide to the Special Collections and Archives Research Center for more information about our by-appointment model, and other services.
In 2005, the Oregon State University Libraries (OSUL) established the Oregon Multicultural Archives (OMA) to highlight multicultural collections already held in the OSUL Archives, to serve as a digital resource linking researchers to other institutions or organizations with multicultural archival collections, and to build an archive with records that document African American, Asian American, Latino/a and Native American communities to reflect how they have contributed to the identity of the state of Oregon.
The mission of the OMA is to assist in preserving the histories and sharing the stories that document Oregon's African American, Asian American, Latino/a, and Native American communities.
The Oregon Multicultural Archives advances scholarship in ethnic studies and racial diversity both on the Oregon State University campus as well as on a state and regional level. The OMA helps to strengthens the university’s core value of diversity, which enhances OSU's "teaching, scholarship, and service as well as our ability to welcome, respect, and interact with other people" (OSU Strategic Plan).
Be sure to visit the OMA Blog for up-to-date information regarding current projects, new collections, recently digitized materials, and much more!
121 The Valley Library
Corvallis OR 97331–4501
Phone: 541-737-3331