2023 Media Archive
October 19, 2023
Abigail Butler, a student journalist studying at the College of the North Atlantic, stopped by the archive to learn more about the ghost lurking in MUNFLA's vault. Read more about her conversation with Pauline Cox, MUNFLA's Archivist, and Meghan Webb, folklore masters program graduate, on their ghostly encounters at the archive in Abigail's article entitled "A haunting in the vaults."
October 2023
Heidi Wicks, LUMINUS Magazine, wrote on the establishment of MUN Folklore and Language archive by Herbert and Violetta (Letty) Halpert in 1968. Thanks to the dedication and hard work of the Halpert family, MUNFLA has become a valuable resource for students, scholars, and the general public. Read more about our roots and role in preserving Newfoundland and Labrador heritage in Heidi’s article entitled "Founding Folklore".
September 17, 2023
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September 11, 2023
Anthony Germain, CBC On the Go, sat down with Nicole Penney, Assistant Archivist, to discuss MUNFLA's #MissusMonday campaign to give women their name. Listen to the broadcast here.
July 26, 2023
Lindsay Alcock, Librarian at the Health Sciences Library and a visual artist, used anecdotes of folk remedies from MUNFLA's collection and natural materials as inspiration to create art during her sabbatical. Read more about this project in The Gazette article by Kristine Power.
Ms. Alcock's art will be on display starting September 2023 in the First Space Gallery located in the Queen Elizabeth II Library, St. John's Campus. Visit the gallery's Facebook page for more information on this upcoming exhibit.
June 22, 2023
Chad Feehan, Saltwire Network Inc., met with MUNFLA's Nicole Penney, Assistant Archivist, to do an updated article on the archive's weekly #MissusMonday social media post. This campaign aims to identify the first names of women who were previously only identified by their husbands' names. View the full article here.
February 16, 2023
Nicole Penney, Assistant Archivist at MUNFLA, was quoted on "weather lore" in The Independent article, Both Sides Now: From up and down, science and folklore offer two different vantage points on the weather, and still–it remains unpredictable, written by Melissa E. Wong. Read the article here.