Difference between revisions of "Louis Adamič Memorial Room"
(closed due to the building's poor condition) |
(mwtool_article) |
||
(One intermediate revision by one other user not shown) | |||
Line 45: | Line 45: | ||
{{Teaser| | {{Teaser| | ||
− | {{wide image|Louis | + | {{wide image|Louis Adamic Memorial Room 2010 interior Photo Alenka Pirman.JPG}} |
The [[Louis Adamič Memorial Room]] is housed in Praproče, the birthplace of [[Louis Adamič]] (1898–1951), a Slovene writer who spent most of his life in the USA after emigrating there in 1913 at the age of 14. Known in the United States as Adamic (''a-dam'ik''), his literature dealt with the social and political issues of both countries (for example, ''Dynamite'', ''The Native's Return'', ''The Eagle and the Roots''). | The [[Louis Adamič Memorial Room]] is housed in Praproče, the birthplace of [[Louis Adamič]] (1898–1951), a Slovene writer who spent most of his life in the USA after emigrating there in 1913 at the age of 14. Known in the United States as Adamic (''a-dam'ik''), his literature dealt with the social and political issues of both countries (for example, ''Dynamite'', ''The Native's Return'', ''The Eagle and the Roots''). | ||
Line 80: | Line 80: | ||
[[Category:Monuments and sites]] | [[Category:Monuments and sites]] | ||
[[Category:Slovenians abroad]] | [[Category:Slovenians abroad]] | ||
+ | [[Category:Literature_museums_and_archives]] |
Latest revision as of 01:14, 19 February 2021
The Louis Adamič Memorial Room was established in 1956 by the Slovene Emigrant Association. A collection consists of the copies of his books (both English language and translated into Slovenian), several issues of the Bulletin of the United Committee of the South-Slavic Americans (published by Adamič in NYC in the 1940s) as well as some personal belongings. In the mid 2010s the displayed exhibits were transferred to the Grosuplje Library due to the building's poor condition. The library holds also some of the writer's correspondence and other documentation, mostly donated by his younger brother France.
See also
- Grosuplje Library
- Municipality of Grosuplje
- Slovenian Migration Institute
- Slovene Emigrant Association
External links
- Louis Adamič on the Municipality of Grosuplje website (in Slovenian)
- Louis Adamic on Wikipedia
- Janja Žitnik Serafin, researcher on Adamič from Slovenian Migration Institute
- Louis Adamic in Japan by translator Shouzou Tahara
- Adamič's grave on the Find a Grave website
Archives
- Louis Adamic Collection in the Princeton University Library
- Henry A. Christian: A Brief Survey of Archival Sources concerning Louis Adamic (1982, pdf)
- Louis Adamic in the Silvermaster FBI Files (p. 437-438)
- Louis Adamič Papers at the Immigration History Research Center, University of Minnesota
- Article about Louis Adamič from the Immigration History Research Center, University of Minnesota