U-1064
Krista Bremer grew up all around the world, in New Jersey, Vienna, and New Mexico. Discussed in her interview are: her arrival in North Carolina to attend journalism school at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill; first meeting with Sy Safransky; work with Jane Brown in the Mass Communica...
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University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Library. Southern Historical Collection.
2014
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ftuninorthcardc:oai:dc.lib.unc.edu:sohp/25455 2023-05-15T13:16:06+02:00 U-1064 Bremer, Krista. Lasseter, M. E. 3 April 2014 WAV http://dc.lib.unc.edu/u?/sohp,25455 unknown University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Library. Southern Historical Collection. University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill U.1. Long Civil Rights Movement: Individual Biographies Interview with Krista Bremer by M.E. Lasseter, 3 April 2014 U-1064, in the Southern Oral History Program Collection #4007, Southern Historical Collection, Wilson Library, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. http://dc.lib.unc.edu/u?/sohp,25455 No restrictions. Open to research. #4007, Southern Oral History Program, http://www.lib.unc.edu/mss/inv/s/Southern_Oral_HistoryProgram_Collection.html 2014 ftuninorthcardc 2016-05-07T22:42:27Z Krista Bremer grew up all around the world, in New Jersey, Vienna, and New Mexico. Discussed in her interview are: her arrival in North Carolina to attend journalism school at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill; first meeting with Sy Safransky; work with Jane Brown in the Mass Communications department; description of the work involved in putting together the Sy Safransky’s Notebook section of The Sun; her decision upon finding out she was pregnant to reject the Charles Kuralt Fellowship in D.C. and abroad in order to stay in Carrboro (N.C.) and raise a family with her husband; her first job at The Sun; Bremer’s memoir, My Accidental Jihad, about her marriage to a Muslim from Libya; how receiving the Rona Jaffe Award for emerging women writers launched her career; how publishing an essay called “Cover Girl” in O Magazine about her daughter's relationship to the headscarf resulted in a book contract with Algonquin; international subscribers to The Sun and her concern about its global language; her experience of the South and how it doesn't match popular narratives about the region; The Sun’s relationships to local writers and to UNC; her relationships with local “literary aristocracy”; Sy Safransky’s evolving and maturing relationship to the magazine; the relationship of The Sun to literary worlds and academic worlds; the intentional lack of easy categorization of the magazine; the magazine's relationship to race; what it's like navigating between a Muslim world and a secular, middle-class American world in Carrboro; hosting dhikr [or zhikr] in their home; her wedding potluck; her awareness of Chapel Hill-Carrboro as a place unlike much of the rest of North Carolina; her thoughts on the work of Jesmyn Ward; details of the story she told in her essay “Blues for Allah” about her family's experience seeing the Tuareg band Tinariwen at the Cat's Cradle; her parents’ work with the United Nations and how that influenced her worldview; how the physical landscape of Carrboro has changed and gentrified since the late 1990s, mentioning the Open Eye café and Neal’s Deli. Other/Unknown Material algonquin University of North Carolina: UNC Digital Collections Chapel Hill ENVELOPE(-57.976,-57.976,-63.685,-63.685) Rona ENVELOPE(13.943,13.943,66.985,66.985) |
institution |
Open Polar |
collection |
University of North Carolina: UNC Digital Collections |
op_collection_id |
ftuninorthcardc |
language |
unknown |
description |
Krista Bremer grew up all around the world, in New Jersey, Vienna, and New Mexico. Discussed in her interview are: her arrival in North Carolina to attend journalism school at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill; first meeting with Sy Safransky; work with Jane Brown in the Mass Communications department; description of the work involved in putting together the Sy Safransky’s Notebook section of The Sun; her decision upon finding out she was pregnant to reject the Charles Kuralt Fellowship in D.C. and abroad in order to stay in Carrboro (N.C.) and raise a family with her husband; her first job at The Sun; Bremer’s memoir, My Accidental Jihad, about her marriage to a Muslim from Libya; how receiving the Rona Jaffe Award for emerging women writers launched her career; how publishing an essay called “Cover Girl” in O Magazine about her daughter's relationship to the headscarf resulted in a book contract with Algonquin; international subscribers to The Sun and her concern about its global language; her experience of the South and how it doesn't match popular narratives about the region; The Sun’s relationships to local writers and to UNC; her relationships with local “literary aristocracy”; Sy Safransky’s evolving and maturing relationship to the magazine; the relationship of The Sun to literary worlds and academic worlds; the intentional lack of easy categorization of the magazine; the magazine's relationship to race; what it's like navigating between a Muslim world and a secular, middle-class American world in Carrboro; hosting dhikr [or zhikr] in their home; her wedding potluck; her awareness of Chapel Hill-Carrboro as a place unlike much of the rest of North Carolina; her thoughts on the work of Jesmyn Ward; details of the story she told in her essay “Blues for Allah” about her family's experience seeing the Tuareg band Tinariwen at the Cat's Cradle; her parents’ work with the United Nations and how that influenced her worldview; how the physical landscape of Carrboro has changed and gentrified since the late 1990s, mentioning the Open Eye café and Neal’s Deli. |
author |
Bremer, Krista. Lasseter, M. E. |
spellingShingle |
Bremer, Krista. Lasseter, M. E. U-1064 |
author_facet |
Bremer, Krista. Lasseter, M. E. |
author_sort |
Bremer, Krista. |
title |
U-1064 |
title_short |
U-1064 |
title_full |
U-1064 |
title_fullStr |
U-1064 |
title_full_unstemmed |
U-1064 |
title_sort |
u-1064 |
publisher |
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Library. Southern Historical Collection. |
publishDate |
2014 |
url |
http://dc.lib.unc.edu/u?/sohp,25455 |
long_lat |
ENVELOPE(-57.976,-57.976,-63.685,-63.685) ENVELOPE(13.943,13.943,66.985,66.985) |
geographic |
Chapel Hill Rona |
geographic_facet |
Chapel Hill Rona |
genre |
algonquin |
genre_facet |
algonquin |
op_source |
#4007, Southern Oral History Program, http://www.lib.unc.edu/mss/inv/s/Southern_Oral_HistoryProgram_Collection.html |
op_relation |
U.1. Long Civil Rights Movement: Individual Biographies Interview with Krista Bremer by M.E. Lasseter, 3 April 2014 U-1064, in the Southern Oral History Program Collection #4007, Southern Historical Collection, Wilson Library, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. http://dc.lib.unc.edu/u?/sohp,25455 |
op_rights |
No restrictions. Open to research. |
_version_ |
1766272588458229760 |