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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Main Authors: Bremer, Krista., Lasseter, M. E.
Language:unknown
Published: University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Library. Southern Historical Collection. 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:http://dc.lib.unc.edu/u?/sohp,25455
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spelling 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.
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