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ماریون استوکس

از ویکی‌پدیا، دانشنامهٔ آزاد
ماریون استوکس
نام هنگام تولدماریون مارگریت باتلر
زادهٔ۲۵ نوامبر ۱۹۲۹
درگذشت۱۴ دسامبر ۲۰۱۲ (۸۳ سال)
پیشه(ها)فعال، تولیدکننده تلویزیونی
همسرجان استوکس جونیور

ماریون مارگریت استوکس (به انگلیسی: Marion Marguerite Stokes) (۲۵ نوامبر ۱۹۲۹–۱۴ دسامبر ۲۰۱۲)[۱] یک تسهیل‌گر دسترسی به برنامه‌های تلویزیون، مدافع حقوق مدنی، فعال، کتابدار، و آرشیویست پرکار بود که به ویژه به خاطر احتکار وسواسی[۲][۳] و بایگانی صدها هزار ساعت برنامه تلویزیونی مشهور است. او از سال ۱۹۷۷ تا زمان مرگش در سال ۲۰۱۲، به مدت ۳۵ سال مشغول ضبط کردن اخبار تلویزیونی بود.[۳][۴]

منابع

[ویرایش]
  1. Clark, Vernon (December 21, 2012). "Obituaries: Marion Stokes, coproducer of TV show". The Philadelphia Inquirer. Archived from the original on September 14, 2022. Retrieved May 4, 2019. Marion Marguerite Stokes, 83, a librarian and social justice advocate who was a coproducer of a 1960s Sunday morning TV talk show entitled Input, died of lung disease Friday, Dec. 14, at her home in Rittenhouse Square.
  2. PJ Vogt, Alex Goldman (December 12, 2013). "#9 – The Second Life of Marion Stokes". Onthemedia.org (Podcast). WNYC. Retrieved August 22, 2014. Marion Stokes was a hoarder. When she died last year, her family had to figure out what to do with 9 separate residences and 3 storage locations full of stuff – everything from tens of thousands of books to decades-old Apple computers. This is the story of how they found a home for the strangest artifact in her collection — 140,000 videocassettes filled with 35 years of round-the-clock cable TV news.
  3. ۳٫۰ ۳٫۱ Hadland, Grace (April 23, 2020). "Marion Stokes and the Power of Guerrilla Archiving". Los Angeles Review of Books (به انگلیسی). Retrieved August 13, 2022. Some might characterize Stokes's activities as hoarding, a compulsive act performed by eccentrics and neurotics unable to let go of things. But others might consider her practice one of radical historiography, Stokes's fundamental project being one of liberation: of truth, of knowledge, and, ultimately, of people.
  4. Morgan Winsor (December 9, 2013). "TV producer's collection of 840,000 hours of news tapes finds a home". CNN. Retrieved August 18, 2014. Marion Stokes, a child of the Great Depression, spent her life saving everything – literally. The Philadelphia resident kept everything from newspapers and electronics to empty cigarette packets and sticky-notes. Among the cardboard boxes and magazine stacks in her home were 140,000 cassette tapes containing recordings of all local and national TV news programs from every channel.