ADMINISTRATIVE INFORMATION
Title Indivisible: Stories of American Community, Doula Archive
Collection Number SC 339
OCLC Number In-process
Creator Center for Documentary Studies at Duke University in partnership with the Center for
Creative Photography at the University of Arizona
Provenance This collection was donated by the Center for Documentary Studies at Duke University in partnership with the Center for
Creative Photography at the University of Arizona in 2001.
Extent,Scope, and Content Note Indivisible is a project of the Center for Documentary Studies at Duke University
in partnership with the Center for Creative Photography at the University of Arizona
and is funded by The Pew Charitable Trusts. The organization's donation of material
to Special Collections, Stony Brook University Libraries was received in October 2001.
The Doula Archive includes three cubic ft. of photographic prints, slides, primary
interviews, working logs, and multimedia featuring the Doula Service of the Stony
Brook University Hospital and Health Sciences Center in Stony Brook, New York.
Arrangement and Processing Note Finding aid created in November 2001 by Kristen J. Nyitray. Updated and revised by Kristen J. Nyitray in July 2019.
Series 1: Photographic prints, black and white, 16" x 20" (21) Series 2: Slides (25) Series 3: Audio cassettes. Primary Interview Sources (9) Series 4: Working Logs of the Audio cassettes-secondary interview source: One set,
created by the interviewer to outline the contents of each recording (1 folder) Series 5: Working Transcripts of Interview excerpts-secondary interview source: One
set, used to edit the Indivisible publication and its accompanying CD, the studio
tour of the museum exhibition, and other project components (1 folder) Series 6: Book: One book: Local Heroes Changing America edited by Tom Rankin and published by Lynhurst Books at the Center for Documentary
Studies, in association with W.W. Norton & Company (October 2000); publication includes
an audio CD with voices of the community members profiled in Indivisible Series 7: Postcards: One complete set (60 cards) from the traveling postcard version
of the museum exhibition, Indivisible: Stories of American Community (1 folder) Series 8: Multimedia: One CD-ROM of the 2001 Indivisible website Series 9: Indivisible Catalog: One catalog of the organization's materials (1 folder)
Language English
Restrictions on Access The collection is open to researchers without restriction.
Rights and Permissions Stony Brook University Libraries' consent to access as the physical owner of the collection
does not address copyright issues that may affect publication rights. It is the sole
responsibility of the user of Special Collections and University Archives materials
to investigate the copyright status of any given work and to seek and obtain permission
where needed prior to publication.
Citation [Item], [Box], Indivisible: Stories of American Community, Doula Archive, Special Collections and University Archives, Stony Brook University Libraries.
Historical Note The project's official language states: "Indivisible is a national documentary project
exploring community life in America today. Through photographs and recorded voices,
Indivisible focuses on the real-life stories of struggle and change in twelve communities
from Delray Beach, Florida, to Ithaca, New York; from the North Pacific Coast of Alaska
to Chicago's Southwest side; from the Rio Grande Valley in Texas to the Yaak Valley,
Montana. In these places people are patrolling streets, building homes, reviving towns,
protecting ecosystems, and otherwise finding ways to improve their lives and surroundings.
Their compelling experiences, captured through the creative lens and on audiotape,
provide the content for Indivisible, presented in a traveling museum exhibition, a
touring free postcard exhibit, a book, and a web site. The project also includes a
guide for educators, a booklet for documenting community change, and major research
archives."
"The impersonality of hospital-based birth, together with increasing medical intervention
and the growing isolation of new mothers, has led to the development of doula service,
a new community role with deep roots in traditional practice. "Doula" is a Greek word
denoting a woman's servant, or someone who acts in service of another person. Today
the term describes a person who is trained to offer prenatal and labor support, as
well as emotional and practical assistance through the early post-partum weeks at
home.
The Doula Service of the University Hospital and Medical Center in Stony Brook, New
York, trains Long Island women to be doulas, and provides the option of doula support
to expectant mothers regardless of their ability to pay. In tandem with Suffolk County's
first hospital midwifery practice, a small group of women, led by an inspired trio
of obstetrician, nurse-midwife, and doula instructor, serve as doulas for mothers
of all ages and backgrounds.
While the work of doulas during childbirth largely consists of encouraging words,
wiped brows, massages, hand-holding, and help with walking and position changes, the
presence of a doula in the delivery room results in remarkably lowered rates of cesarean
sections and use of anesthesia, particularly epidurals. Their postpartum service includes
breast feeding advice, companionship and conversation, and such necessary tasks as
babysitting older siblings, cooking, cleaning, shopping, and newborn care. A doula
intends never to supersede the relationship between mother and child, nor the role
of the father, family, and friends, but rather to help create a supportive environment
for those relationships to flourish in the presence of new life."
Subjects Community life -- United States. Social problems -- United States. Community organization -- United States. Community development -- United States. United States -- Social conditions -- 1980- Community development. Community life. Community organization. Social conditions Social problems. United States.
INVENTORY
Series 1: Photographs
Box 1
Doula 1: Robert and Sunshin Gordon's first look at their new daughter. Doula 2: Robert Gordon holds Sunshin as first-time doula Jacqueline Shepard adds
support. Doula 3: Jacqueline Shepard and a fellow student in a doula class train for labor
support through role playing. Doula 4: Midwife Jane Arnold attends Sunshin Gordon and Robert Gordon hours before
the birth of their first child. Doula 5: Hands holding cast of body. Doula 6: Jacqueline Shepard witnesses her first birth as a doula. Doula 7: Laboring Sunshin Gordon with her husband, Robert, and first-time doula Jacqueline
Shepard. Doula 8: Sarah Matematico. Doula 9: Doula Debra Pascali-Bonaro helps Paula Restivo-Wilkens create a plaster
cast of her body to commemorate her pregnancy. Doula 10: Lise Golub makes a post-partum visit and delights in Olivia Gordon, a baby
whose birth she recently attended as a doula. Doula 11: Sarah Matematico and her new baby, Phayseria, wait with mid-wife Jane Arnold
for their ride home from the hospital. Doula 12: Phayseria Karla Mitchell with her father Philip and her uncle. Doula 13: Sarah Matematico and Phayseria wait for the baby's father at his mother's
house. Doula 14: Sunshin Gordon is comforted by the hands of midwife Jane Arnold and doula
Jacqueline Shepard. Doula 15: Baby looking from over shoulder. Doula 16: Keith Swarthout holds his new child, just born by cesarean section, as
mother Tammy Price lays her hand on the baby's head. Doula 17: Ana Fox Savillo at home with her son, Alejandro. Doula 18: Olivia Gordon studies her father, Robert, moments after delivery. Doula 19: Unidentified mother and child being kissed. Doula 20: Sunshin, Robert, and Olivia Gordon pose for their first family portrait.
Doula 21: Newborn child being held by gloved hands.
Series 2: Slides
Box 2
Doula 1: Robert and Sunshin Gordon's first look at their new daughter. Doula 2: Jacqueline Shepard holds up portraits of her role models, her mother and
sister, in her brother's backyard. Doula 3: Jacqueline Shepard and a fellow student in a doula class train for labor
support through role playing. Doula 4: Midwife Jane Arnold attends Sunshin Gordon and Robert Gordon hours before
the birth of their first child. Doula 5: Sunshin Gordon in labor. Doula 6: Jacqueline Shepard witnesses her first birth as a doula. Doula 7: Laboring Sunshin Gordon with her husband, Robert, and first-time doula Jacqueline
Shepard. Doula 8: Sunshin Gordon rests in the delivery room. Doula 9: Doula Debra Pascali-Bonaro helps Paula Restivo-Wilkens create a plaster
cast of her body to commemorate her pregnancy. Doula 10: Lise Golub makes a post-partum visit and delights in Olivia Gordon, a baby
whose birth she recently attended as a doula. Doula 11: Sara Matematico and her new baby, Phayseria, wait with mid-wife Jane Arnold
for their ride home from the hospital. Doula 12: Phayseria Karla Mitchell with her father and her uncle. Doula 13: Sarah Matematico and Phayseria wait for the baby's father at his mother's
house. Doula 14: Soubia Asim and her baby receive a home visit from Lise Golub, their doula.
Doula 15: Ana Fox Savillo with her just-delivered son, Alejandro Antonio Domingo
Savillo. Doula 16: Keith Swarthout holds his new child, just born by cesarean section, as
mother Tammy Price lays her hand on the baby's head. Doula 17: Ana Fox Savillo at home with her son, Alejandro. Doula 18: Olivia Gordon looks at her father, Robert, moments after delivery. Doula 19: Robert Gordon kisses his newborn baby daughter. Doula 20: Susnshin, Robert, and Olivia Gordon pose for their first family portrait.
Doula 21: Sunshin Gordon in labor, being attended by doula Jacqueline Shepard and
midwife Jane Arnold. Doula 22: Robert and Sunshin Gordon Doula 23: Jacqueline Shepard and Sunshin Gordon Doula 24: Robert and Sunshin Gordon Doula 25: Robert Gordon and his child, Olivia
Series 3: Audio cassettes - Primary Interview Sources
Doula Project 2 - 3/2/99 (K. Michel) Doula Project 5.1- 4/14/99 Jane Arnold training (K. Michel) Doula Project 5.2 - 4/14/99 Jane Arnold, interviews, training (K. Michel) Doula Project 6.1 - 4/14/99 Training, Planned Parenthood (K. Michel) Doula Project 6.2 - 4/14/99 Training, Planned Parenthood (side A only) (K. Michel)
Doula 7 - (K. Michel) Doula 8 - tape 1 (K. Michel) Doula 8 - tape 2 (K. Michel) Doula 9 - (K. Michel)
Series 4: Working Logs
One set created by the interviewer to outline the contents of each recording.
Series 5: Working Transcripts
One set of the transcripts used to edit the Indivisible publication and its accompanying CD, the studio tour of the museum exhibition, and
other project components.
Series 6: Book
Local Heroes Changing America edited by Tom Rankin and published by Lynhurst Books at the Center for Documentary
Studies in association with W.W. Norton & Company (October 2000); publication includes
an audio CD with voices of the community members profiled in Indivisible. (Separation note: Removed from collection and housed in Special Collections under
call number Archives X HN 59.2 .R36 2000)
Series 7: Postcards
Midwifery Practice and Doula Service, University Hospital and Medical Center, Stony
Brook, New York (5 cards) Dine' bi' iina', Inc. (Navajo Lifeways), Navajo Nation (5 cards) Eau Claire Community Council and Eau Clair Community of Shalom, Eau-Clair-North Columbia,
South Carolina (5 cards) Proyecto Azteca, San Juan, Texas (5 cards) Southwest Youth Collaborative, Chicago, Illinois (5 cards) Yaak Valley Forest Community, Yaak Valley, Montana (5 cards) Haitian Citizens Police Academy and Roving Patrol, and MAD DADS Street Patrol, Delray
Beach, Florida (5 cards) Alaskan Fishing Communities, North Pacific Coast, Alaska (5 Cards) CHALK (Communities in Harmony Advocating for Learning and Kids), San Francisco, California
(5 cards) Alternatives in Federal Credit Union, Ithaca, New York (5 cards) Hand Made in America, Small Town Revitalization Project, Western North Carolina (5
cards) The Village of Arts and Humanities, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania (5 cards)
Series 8: Multimedia
One CD-ROM of the 2001 Indivisible website.
Series 9: Indivisible Catalog
One catalog of materials housed at the two main Indivisible archives. The main archives
are at the Duke University Special Collections Library and the Center for Creative
Photography at the University of Arizona.
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