CLASSIFICATION
Swallow ID:
7098
Partner Institution:
Simon Fraser University
Source Collection Label:
Warren Tallman Fonds
Sub Series:
Warren Tallman Fonds
ITEM DESCRIPTION
Title:
Warren Tallman's lecture on pre-modern and modern ear of American English literature language, its vocabularies, and Emily Dickinson and Walt Whitman's poetry elements at [Buffalo – S.U.N.Y. (University at Buffalo)?] on January 20, 1987
Title Source:
Recording and J-card
Language:
English
Production Context:
Classroom recording
Genre:
Speeches: Talks
Identifiers:
[]
Rights
Rights:
Copyright Not Evaluated (CNE)
CREATORS
Name:
Tallman, Warren
Dates:
1921-1994
Role:
"Speaker"
Name:
Dickinson, Emily
Dates:
1830-1886
Role:
"Author"
Notes:
Warren Tallman talks about Emily and her poetry on the second side
Name:
Whitman, Walt
Dates:
1819-1892
Role:
"Author"
Notes:
Warren Tallman talks about Emily and Wall and their poetry elements on the first side
CONTRIBUTORS
MATERIAL DESCRIPTION
Image:
Recording Type:
Analogue
AV Type:
Audio
Material Designation:
Cassette
Physical Composition:
Magnetic Tape
Extent:
1/8 inch
Sound Quality:
Good
Physical Condition:
Good
Other Physical Description:
Black and white clear jewel case with J-card
DIGITAL FILE DESCRIPTION
Channel Field:
Stereo
Sample Rate:
44.1 kHz
Duration:
T00:47:31
Size:
50.8 MB
Bitrate:
32 bit
Encoding:
WAV for master files and .MP3 for online files
Channel Field:
Stereo
Sample Rate:
44.1 kHz
Duration:
T00:47:30
Size:
50.7 MB
Bitrate:
32 bit
Encoding:
WAV for master files and .MP3 for online files
Dates
Date:
1987-01-20
Type:
Production Date
Source:
J-card
LOCATION
Address:
Buffalo, NY 14260, United States
Venue:
Buffalo – S.U.N.Y. (University at Buffalo)
Latitude:
42.9533
Longitude:
-78.8181
Notes:
We assume Buffalo on the j-card refers to the University at Buffalo in New York. The State University of New York at Buffalo, commonly referred to as the University at Buffalo or SUNY Buffalo.
CONTENT
NOTES
Type:
General
Note:
On the first side, Warren Tallman's lecture mainly focuses on pre-modern and modern ear of American English literature language and its vocabularies. Meanwhile, he begins talking about Emily Dickinson and Walt Whitman and their poetry elements such as tone, syllabus; he continues on the second side talking about poets' primary stress, vowel, and consonant stress
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