Interview with Shannon Carter
Audio
Interview with Shannon Carter
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http://hdl.handle.net/11134/40002:TMS_53046.1
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Persons
Creator (cre): Shannon Carter
Creator (cre): Peter Moran
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Title
Interview with Shannon Carter
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Origin Information
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Description |
Description
(a) Interview with Shannon Carter. Interviewed by Peter Moran on July 21, 2022 at New Haven Free Public Library Ives Branch, 133 Elm Street, New Haven. (b) Photograph of Shannon Carter taken at her interview. She was interviewed as part of the Connecticut Historical Society's Community History Project discussing her experience during the COVID-19 Pandemic. Shannon Carter is a former library employee who has recently completed a master’s degree in public health. She started this degree during the pandemic at Yale University, and it helped inform her exceptional knowledge of policy and public health. Shannon has worked various retail jobs, including working at Starbucks during the pandemic, and identifies with the disabled community due to an autoimmune disorder. She said both experiences often lead to dehumanization by others. The pandemic gave a brief glimpse of a society that was more accessible, more cautious, and briefly more accommodating. The pandemic was very political to Shannon, both in a sense of partisanship, but also in a sense of privilege and power for different people, bodies, and institutions. She took part in some Black Lives Matter protests. Shannon’s mother caught COVID-19 and stayed in the hospital and survived with treatment. Shannon and her partner both found community and comfort in online communities and digital entertainment, and in their dog.
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Extent
Duration: 1 Hours, 34 Minutes, 45 Seconds
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Physical Location
The Connecticut Historical Society (1 Elizabeth Street), Server
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Audio Collections
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Local Identifier |
Local Identifier
tms: 2022.20.27a-b
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Handle |
Handle
http://hdl.handle.net/11134/40002:19642515
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Title |
Title
Title
Interview with Shannon Carter
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Parent Item | |
Resource Type |
Resource Type
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Description |
Description
(a) Interview with Shannon Carter. Interviewed by Peter Moran on July 21, 2022 at New Haven Free Public Library Ives Branch, 133 Elm Street, New Haven. (b) Photograph of Shannon Carter taken at her interview. She was interviewed as part of the Connecticut Historical Society's Community History Project discussing her experience during the COVID-19 Pandemic. Shannon Carter is a former library employee who has recently completed a master’s degree in public health. She started this degree during the pandemic at Yale University, and it helped inform her exceptional knowledge of policy and public health. Shannon has worked various retail jobs, including working at Starbucks during the pandemic, and identifies with the disabled community due to an autoimmune disorder. She said both experiences often lead to dehumanization by others. The pandemic gave a brief glimpse of a society that was more accessible, more cautious, and briefly more accommodating. The pandemic was very political to Shannon, both in a sense of partisanship, but also in a sense of privilege and power for different people, bodies, and institutions. She took part in some Black Lives Matter protests. Shannon’s mother caught COVID-19 and stayed in the hospital and survived with treatment. Shannon and her partner both found community and comfort in online communities and digital entertainment, and in their dog.
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Held By
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May contain sensitive language or subject matter
See CTDA's Statement on Sensitive Content.
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