Descriptive Summary
Administrative Information
Biography
Scope and Content
Note on 2022 Revision
Descriptive Summary
Title: Charles Irby Collection,
Date (inclusive): 1790-1988
Collection number: CEMA 10
Creator:
Irby, Charles
Extent:
44 hollinger boxes, approx. 300 audio/video items, 1 portfolio box (maps) which occupy approximately thirty linear feet.
Repository:
University of California, Santa Barbara. Library.
California Ethnic and Multicultural Archives
Shelf location: For current information on the location of these
materials, please consult the library's online catalog.
Language:
English.
Administrative Information
Provenance
Donated by Gretchen M. Bataille, February 21, 1996.
Restrictions
The collection is open for research.
Publication Rights
Copyright resides with donor
Preferred Citation
[Identification of item], Charles Irby Collection, CEMA 10, Department of Special Collections, University Libraries, University
of California, Santa Barbara.
Biography
Charles C. Irby was a cultural geographer who was a pioneer in the development of ethnic and gender studies in this country.
Irby was a founding member of the National Association for Interdisciplinary Ethnic Studies (which later became the National
Association for Ethnic Studies) and served as president of the association from 1976 to 1978. A prolific author in the field
of ethnic studies, he was also editor of NAES publications.
Irby was born on April 4, 1938 in Greenville, South Carolina. He earned his doctorate in Geography (1978) from Simon Fraser
University, British Columbia. His Master's degree in Geography (1968) is from the University of California, Davis. Irby served
in the U.S. Air Force from 1957 until 1960.
Over the course of his career Irby taught at various universities, including Simon Fraser, the University of Oregon, and the
University of California, Davis. From 1974 until his death in 1987, Irby was a professor of ethnic and women's studies at
California State Polytechnic University, Pomona where he was the university's chair of the Ethnic and Women's Studies Department
from 1974 to 1980. In 1983, Irby wrote the following short autobiography: "My college-level teaching career began during
the winter quarter of 1969 at the University of California, Davis, where I developed a course concerned with the "Cultural
Geography of Black America." One result of that course was a new-found interest in the cultural history of the many ethnic
peoples who came to the Americas to begin life anew (it took me longer to recognize the pressures the various peoples put
on the native inhabitants). I am primarily interested in the questions of how and why people "do" where they are and attempt
to do likewise after migrating from one place to another. I have followed the paths of migrating Mennonites from Manitoba
through Mexico to Belize and migrating blacks from Oklahoma and California to Mexico, New Mexico, British Columbia, and
Alberta
. I have traveled extensively throughout Belize, Canada, the Caribbean, Mexico, and the United States to get peoples' perceptions
of their experiences. My academic training as a geographer allows me to remain a generalist in a specialist-oriented world;
as a result, I have produced videotapes concerned with ethnic minority women, mental health issues among Amerasians, and a
slide production on blacks in film. I have developed and taught twenty-five courses in ethnic and women's studies, and I continue
to upgrade my skills in courses such as writing across the disciplines and word processing technology."
In a tribute to Charles C. Irby, the National Association for Ethnic Studies called attention to the principles for which
he worked: "that ethnic studies serves a necessary purpose in today's society and that only by understanding this country's
rich multi-racial and multi-cultural heritage will it be possible to create a more loving and just society."
Scope and Content
The Charles C. Irby Collection was deeded to the California Ethnic and Multicultural Archives of the University of California,
Santa Barbara, on February 21, 1996 and consists of six series distributed among 44 archival boxes which occupy approximately
thirty linear feet. The collection represents Irby's life work as a prominent academician whose research and publications
explored various dimensions of African American history, including the socio-cultural history of Black People in the West,
the migration of Black People to Canada, access to agribusiness by American Black People and the history of Black People in
the cinema. Materials in the collection take many formats, including manuscripts, correspondence files, audio-visual materials,
research notes, and drafts of Irby's publications. The materials are housed in the UCSB Davidson Library's Department of Special
Collections, as part of the California Ethnic and Multicultural Archives, and are arranged, as far as possible, in the order
in which they were received from the donor. This order is not exact, by any means, but consists primarily in a grouping by
subject, with materials in each main subject category further grouped according to their specific topic.
Note on 2022 Revision
The term "Blacks" has been replaced with "Black People" in series and subseries titles. However, the term "Blacks" has been
retained in file titles, which were likely transcribed from original folders and not supplied. "Blacks" has been changed to
"Black People" in the scope and content note. "Blacks" has been retained in the biographical note, where it appears within
a direct quotation.