Pradyumna P. Karan papers
Abstract
Descriptive Summary
- Title
- Pradyumna P. Karan papers
- Date
- 1909-2016, undated (inclusive)
- 1956-2012 (inclusive)
- Creator
- Karan, Pradyumna P. (Pradyumna Prasad)
- Extent
- 9.32 Cubic Feet
- Subjects
- Bhutan -- Motion pictures
- Bhutan -- Photographs -- Archival resources
- Himalaya Mountains Region -- Photographs -- Archival resources
- Nepal -- Photographs -- Archival resources
- Sikkim (India) -- Motion pictures
- Sikkim (India) -- Photographs -- Archival resources
- Tibet Autonomous Region (China) -- Periodicals
- Geographers -- India
- Geographers -- United States -- Kentucky
- Geography -- Fieldwork
- Geography -- Study and teaching (Higher) -- Kentucky
- Human geography -- Himalaya Mountains
- Publishers and publishing -- Kentucky.
- Universities and colleges -- Faculty.
- black-and-white photographs
- Documentary films
- Electronic records
- Film-making (Motion pictures).
- Motion pictures
- Photographs
- Sikkim (India) -- Maps
- Himalaya Mountains Region -- Maps
- Nepal -- Maps
- India -- Maps
- Japan -- Maps
- Maps
- Manuscript maps
- Karan, Pradyumna P. (Pradyumna Prasad)
- University of Kentucky. Department of Geography
- Arrangement
- Collection is arranged by subject and format into 15 series: Awards, Curriculum Vitae, and Personal Files; Administrative Records; Correspondence and Personal Information; Professional Organizations, Conferences, and Grants; Teaching; George Etzel Pearcy Papers; Research Materials; Publications; Printed Material; General Photographs; Fieldwork Photographs; Then and Now Photographs; Slides; Film, Audio, and Special Formats; and Maps.
- Preferred Citation
- 2019ua045 : [identification of item], Pradyumna p. Karan Papers (dated 1909-2016, undated, bulk 1956-2012, undated, University of Kentucky Libraries Special Collections Research Center.
- Repository
- University of Kentucky
Collection Overview
- Biography / History
- Pradyumna "Paul" "P.P." Prasad Karan (1930-2018) was among the first non-Western, international, person of color tenure-track faculty member at the University of Kentucky. Born to a working class family in Gaya, India, Karan excelled at education, earning his Bachelor's degree with honors in Economics from Patna University and a Masters degree in Geography from Banaras Hindu University. After visiting the United States for the 1952 International Geographical Conference, Karan decided to pursue his PhD at Indiana University, which he completed in 1956. After graduation he joined the geography department at the University of Kentucky from 1956 to 2017, serving as department chair from 1967-1975 where he oversaw the development of the graduate program in geography. Karan was heavily invested in researching the social and environmental changes in Himalayan mountains, extensively traveling and making connections among the various peoples and governments of the region, which took him to Nepal, Bhutan, Sikkim, and Tibet. Another key research area was in the history of the discipline of geography in the 20th century. In addition to his leadership in the department of geography, Karan played key roles at the University Press of Kentucky, the Japan Studies program, and the Indian Studies minor. In 2010 he was awarded the University Research Professor by the University of Kentucky and the Distinguished Scholar Award from the Asia Specialty Group of the Association of American Geographers. Karan passed away after a brief illness in 2018, leaving behind his wife Hazel Karan and nephew Madhu Sudan.
- Scope and Content
- The Pradyumna P. Karan Papers (dated 1909-2016, undated, bulk 1956-2012, undated; 9.32 cubic feet, 3.63 Gigabytes; 4 record storage cartons, 3 document boxes, 6 photograph boxes, 10 flat boxes, 5 oversize folders, 32 cans of film, 3 audio reels, and 1330 electronic files) comprise administrative and grant records, correspondence and conference material, course materials, writings and speeches, biographical information and honors and awards, research notes and subject files, printed materials, maps, photographs, slides, and film documenting Pradyumna Prasad Karan's career as a cultural geographer, administrator, and faculty member in the Department of Geography at the University of Kentucky. The maps include manuscript maps of India, the Indian Himalayas (formerly known as Sikkim), Nepal, and Japan that were collected, created, and annotated by Karan, particularly maps of Sikkim Bazars. The still and moving images were taken by Karan of his fieldwork in the Himalayas, including the countries of Nepal, Bhutan, the Indian Himalayas, and Tibet, and include scenes of people, buildings, and landscapes. Included are two films created from footage Karan took in Bhutan and Sikkim, A Kingdom in the Clouds: Bhutan (1965) and Where the Mountains are God: Sikkim (1968). The printed material includes publications from and about Tibet, Bhutan, China, India and Sikkim, and the Himalaya. The correspondence documents Karan's national and international connections across the discipline of geography from the mid-1970s to the 1990s. Also included are papers related to geographer G. Etsel Pearcy and photographs of Bhutan by geographer David Zurick. The collection contains little textual information from before 1967. There is also sparse information about Karan's time as department chair from 1967-1975.
Restrictions on Access and Use
- Conditions Governing Access
- Collection is open to researchers by appointment
- Use Restrictions
- Property rights reside with the University of Kentucky. The University of Kentucky holds the copyright for materials created in the course of business by University of Kentucky employees. Copyright for all other materials has not been assigned to the University of Kentucky. For information about permission to reproduce or publish, please contact the Special Collections Research Center.
Contents of the Collection
Awards, Curriculum Vitae, and Personal Files, 1956-2016, undated
Newspaper clippings about Karan from the Herald-Leader, Courier-Journal, and Kitchener-Waterloo Record, 1957-1986
Newspaper clippings about Karan from the Kentucky Kernel and various campus newsletters/newspapers, 1966-2006
Personal and professional stationary, undated
CV and list of publications, 1993, 1994, 1998, 2002, 2004, 2011, undated
Honors, awards, and diplomas, 1956-1987
Last will and testament, India, 1986
Correspondence about salary, sabbatical, retirement, 1980-2016
Annual reviews, 1995-2011, scattered
Award plaque, Distinguished Scholar Award from the Regional Development and Planning Specialty Group of the Association of American Geographers, 2010
Award plaque, University Research Professor, 2010
American Institute of Planners certificate and posters, 1977, undated
Business cards, undated
Japan travel documents, undated
Administrative Records, 1946-2012
Scope and Contents
Contains correspondence, agendas and minutes, reports, and plans and proposals documenting Karan's service responsibilities at the University of Kentucky as a member of the geography department, the Japan Studies program, the College of Arts and Sciences, and the whole of the University. There are few materials about early efforts to internationalize campus or of Karan's time as department chair. Arranged into three subseries: Department of Geography, Japan Studies Program, and College of Arts&Sciences and University-Wide.
Department of Geography, 1946-1996
Geography course enrollment, 1974-1981, 1981
Memos/correspondence about hiring and tenure decisions, 1985-1991
Department memos, 1975-1995
"Department of Geography Review of Program 1945-1967 and Prospects", 1967
Department of Geography copies of annual reports used for "Review of Program, 1945-1967" with accompanying handwritten note by Karan and initials of Geography faculty who reviewed the reports, 1946-1949
1988 department review and correspondence, 1988
1992 department review and correspondence, 1992
2004 department review and correspondence, 2004
"Review of Undergraduate Program in Geography", 1978-1979
Clarke Dunlap lawsuit correspondence and copy of Karan deposition, 1983-1985
Dick Gilbreath hiring and cartographic lab letters of support, 1997
G. Etzel Pearcy Fellowship in Geopolitics correspondence, 1989-1996
Copies of "State of the Department" address, 1984, 1986
Japan Studies Program, 1994-1999
College of Arts & Sciences and University-Wide, 1956-2012
Correspondence about other University committees and boards, 1977-2012
College of Arts and Sciences advisory committee for tenure review, 1993-1994
Center for Developmental Change program review, 1983
University Senate appointment and agenda, 2009
Center of Excellence for India Studies proposal, 2008
Arts and Sciences Notes, 1956-1967, scattered
Program review of University Press of Kentucky and drafts, 2003
Patterson School evaluation and strategic plan, 1992
Undergraduate degree in planning proposal, 1981
Correspondence and Personal Information, 1955-2012, undated
Scope and Contents
Primarily contains incoming professional correspondence, arranged into three subseries by individual, topic, or date. The correspondents represented in the three subseries do not overlap. The series also includes a subseries of curriculum vitae (CVs) of foreign academics collected by Karan. There is some overlap of these CVs with the correspondents in the individual subseries. Correspondence related to grants and publications can be found in the Professional Organizations, Conferences, and Grants Series and in the Publications Series, respectively.
By individual or entity, 1968-2003, undated
Rais Akhter, 1985
Anonymous [Sikkim Palace], 1979
Asia Environmental Council, 1992-1995
Janice Averitt, 1975
H.L. Baisya, 1979-1980, 1985-1986
Harm J. de Blij, 1983, 1989
Tom Chao, 1985-1987
Explorer's Club, 1985
George V. Cooper, 1977-1979
H.A. Gleason Jr, 1979
John Fraser Hart, 1975-1987
Charles M. Heyda [Defense Mapping Agency], 1983
Hiroshi Ishii, 1991
Preston James, 1977-1983
Christopher Jasparro, 1997
S. Jijma, 1984
Walter Kollmorgen, 1980
Eugene "Cotton" Mather, 1974-2003
Douglas McManis, 1985-1986
B.K. Narain, 1980-1986
Stanislaw Otok, 1987-1989
E.G. Pearcy, 1974, undated
Sangye Penjor, 1968-1974
R.K. Prasad, 1986
K. Sita, 1983-1989
Pradham P.C. Srivastavd, 1971
Kazuko Tanaka, 1992, 1997
Jon Taylor, 1998
D.N. Verme, 1985
J.R. Wilson, 1985
Steve White, 1980
By topic or format, 1975-2012, undated
Prospective students, 1988-1995
Requests for off-prints, 1985-1987, undated
Requests for writing contributions, 1981, 1999, undated
Requests/acknowledgement/thank yous for letters of recommendation, 1975-2008
Postcards and greeting cards sent/received, undated
Holiday cards received, undated
Collected stamps and envelopes, undated
Envelopes and stamps from correspondence (2 folders), undated
Miscellaneous, 1981-2012
By date, 1955-2002
Pre-1965 correspondence, 1955-1964
Air mail letters received, 1979-1995
Correspondence with University of Kentucky geography faculty members, 1978-1986
Correspondence with other North American-based geographers, 1972-2002
Correspondence with other non-North American based geographers, 1977-1987
Professional Organizations, Conferences, and Grants, 1957-2009, undated
Professional organizations, 1968, 1992-1993
Conferences and speeches, 1957-2009
Advertisements and programs from conferences held at the University of Kentucky, 1957-2008
Advertisements for Karan speeches on campus, 1986, 2009
Brochures for international conferences, 1983-1992
Sino-Tibetan Relations: Prospects for the Future, proceedings, agenda, notes, correspondence, 1992
Festival of Japan planning documents, 1998-1999
Japan in the Bluegrass planning document, 1999
Lecture and interview at Harmony Hall, 2008
Grants, 1957-2001, undated
Japan Society for the Promotion of Science, 1999
Draft proposal/correspondence for National Science Foundation/National Geographic Society grant on Nepal environment with David Zurick, 1990-1991
American Association for the Advancement of Science grant correspondence, 1957
Draft proposal for grant projects in the Himalayas, 1985
National Geographic Society Research Grant correspondence and drafts for research in Sikkim and Bhutan, 1983-1984
National Science Foundation grant proposal entitled "Sustainable Development in Mountain Regions", 2000
Draft grant proposal entitled "Sustainable Development in Mountain Regions", 2003
Pacific Cultural Foundation pollution grant, correspondence and application, 1983-1985
National Science Foundation grant proposal entitled "Adoption and Diffusion of Modern Health Practices in Rural India", 1984
Review of National Science Foundation grant applications submitted by Karan, undated
Karan's review of National Science Foundation grants, 1991
Japan Foundation grant, 2001
Teaching, 1971-2012, undated
Scope and Contents
Contains course syllabi, readings, lecture notes, and copies of assignments and exams documenting Karan's teaching assignments. Examples of student work are scattered throughout with significant examples related to the Japan study abroad program and the undergraduate course, GEO 160: Lands and People of the Non-Western World. Other items of note include student evaluations of Karan's teaching from the early 2000s and copies of syllabi for early classes in the graduate program in geography. Arranged into three series by subject: Administration, Undergraduate-Level Courses, and Graduate-Level Courses.
Administration, 1975-2003, undated
Study abroad in Japan, correspondence, 1991-1993
Fundraising for Japan study abroad, 1991-1992
Pamphlet for Daigaku Seminar House, 1975
Brochures for geography field program, Himalaya Mountains and Japan, 1990-1992
Student work and photos from summer study abroad program in Japan, 2005-2006
GEO 160 student evaluations, undated
GEO 300 student evaluations, 2003
Course Evaluations for GEO 160, GEO 152, A&S 300, and others, 1995-1996
Student Evaluations of Karan, 2004-2012, scattered
Core Course Syllabi from the University of Tennessee Graduate School of Planning, 1983
Undergraduate-level courses, 1956-2004, undated
A&S 300: [various titles] Mini College syllabi and drafts, 1994-1997, undated
A&S 301: Development in a Multi-Cultural Context Mini College syllabi, 1996-1997
GEO 160: Lands and People of the Non-Western World syllabi, 1994-2004
GEO 160 notes, undated
GEO 160 9/11 assignment, undated
GEO 160 student work, undated
GEO 160 study guides, 2001, undated
GEO 160 exams and answer keys, 1990-2003, undated
GEO 160 syllabi and assignments for Independent Study Program, undated
GEO 300: Geographic Research syllabi and course materials, 2002-2003
GEO 330: Geography of the Indian Subcontinent review sheet and exam, 2001
GEO 333: Geography of East Asia syllabi and test, 1993-1994
GEO/JPN 334: Environment, Society, and Economy of Japan syllabi, 1998-2001
GEO/JPN 334 test and study guides, 1998-2001, undated
GEO 410 course materials, undated
GEO 420G: Urban and Regional Planning syllabi, course materials, and reading list, 1983
GEO 420G copies of readings, undated
GEO 430: Land Use Planning syllabi, 1984-1987
GEO 430 exams, 1979-1984
GEO 430 readings, undated
GEO 460: Topics in Planning-Urban Growth Management syllabi, 1981
Class on South Asia study guide and reading list, 1960s?
Student map of World War II by Jacqueline Goins, 2000s?
Graduate-level courses, 1971-2012, undated
GEO 450/655: Planning Research Methods syllabi, 1988
GEO 550: Geography of Natural Resources syllabi and readings, 1978-1979
GEO 550 handwritten notes, undated
GEO 550 exams, 1978-1979
GEO 550 copies of readings, undated
GEO/JPN 551: Geography of the Japanese Multinational Corporations syllabi, 2012, undated
GEO 565: Land Use Planning course materials, 1977-1979, undated
GEO 565 readings and course materials, undated
GEO 702: Seminar in Spatial Models syllabi and reading lists, 1973-1982, undated
GEO 702 simulation exercises, 1971, undated
GEO 702 Summaries of Different Areas of Geography, undated
GEO 702 handwritten notes about areas of geography and geographic thought, undated
GEO 707: Development of Geographic Thought syllabi, various years and instructors, undated
GEO 707 Basic Readings in Geography for Grad Students, 1974
GEO 707 biography assignment, 1987
GEO 707 handwritten course notes, undated
GEO 707 From Hartshorne to Harvey . . . and after?, undated
GEO 707 course materials, undated
GEO 707 newspaper clippings on the state of the discipline, 1977-1983
GEO 710: Research Methods in Geography syllabi and course materials, 1973-1982
GEO 717: Urban Growth Planning/Management Systems syllabi, 1991-1993
GEO 717 handwritten class notes, 1991
GEO 717 readings, undated
GEO 718: Environmental Impacts of Climate Change syllabi, 1997-2007, undated
GEO 720: Regional Studies: Sustainable Development of High Asian Mountain Ecosystems, Himalaya, Hindu Kush, Pamirs and Tibet syllabi, 2002
GEO 722: Japan and the Pacific Rim syllabi, 1994
GEO 723: Geography of Multinational Corporations syllabi and reading list, student work, 1991-1997
George Etsel Pearcy Papers, 1909-1979, undated
Scope and Contents
Contains publications, reviews of writings, course materials, and certificates related to geographer George Etzel Pearcy's career, including copies of writings for internal newsletters and publicity material related to his books. These papers are thought to have been given to Karan when he worked to establish the University of Kentucky G. Etzel Pearcy Fellowship in Geopolitics in the early 1990s.
Born in 1909, Pearcy graduated with his PhD in geography from Clark University in 1940. He taught at the University of Pennsylvania from 1935 to 1939 before joining Trans World Airlines to develop international air routes. In 1950, he joined the State Department, eventually serving as the Geographer of the United States from 1957 to his retirement in 1969. In retirement, he taught for three years at California State University, Los Angeles, before passing away in 1980.
Birth certificate, diplomas, certificates, 1909-1963
TWA Abroad: International Traffic Information Series No. 1, 1947
Clippings of Pearcy articles from TWA Company newsletter Skyliner and Starliner, undated
Clippings of Pearcy articles from State Department newsletter, 1964-1969, undated
Office of the Geographer publications on maritime boundaries and China, 1978-1979
Publicity for Pearcy's writings and ideas, 1974, undated
Reviews of Pearcy's writings, 1977-1979
Course materials, California State University Los Angeles on Mongolian tourism and a driving tour of California, 1975, undated
Photographs of Pearcy, undated
Research Materials and Notes, 1967-1979, undated
Notebooks for PhD work, undated
Press release and newspaper clippings for Kentucky population projection, 1978-1979
Correspondence regarding Kentucky population projections, 1978-1979
Notes, calculations, and readings for Kentucky population forecast, 1977-1978
United States Geological Survey map and aerial photos of Erlanger, KY, undated
India pollution study notes and data, undated
Handwritten notes on the cultural, political, and economic history of Japan, undated
Maps of Sikkim, undated
Sikkim raw data, undated
Research notes, Sikkim, 1972
Research Notes, Nepal (2 folders), 1972
Raw data, Nepal, undated
Foreign aid in Nepal, notes, 1967-1969, undated
Handwritten notes on urbanization and industrialization in Nepal, undated
Nepal in the Modern World, undated
Publications, 1954-2010, undated
Scope and Contents
Primarily contains correspondence with publishers and editors and drafts related to various scholarly publications authored or edited by Karan. Photos for some of these publications can be found in the General Photographs Series (Series X). Karan's relationship as an author with the University Press of Kentucky is well-documented in this series. The series also includes some unpublished materials and off-prints of materials not held by the University of Kentucky.
Administrative, 1967-2010, undated
Book proposals, 1999, undated
Book correspondence and contracts, 1975-2008
Kentucky: A Regional Geography, 1975
Evolution of Geographic Thought in America: A Kentucky Root, 1983-1989
Across the Appalachians, 1992
The Non-Western World and The Himalayas, 1994-2002
Nepal: Development and Change in a Landlocked Himalayan Kingdom, 1995-1996
The Japanese City, 1997-1998
Japan Landscapes (also reader reports and reviews), 1997-1998
Local Environmental Movements, 2008
Journal article drafts, notes, and correspondence, 1961-2002, undated
Correspondence about "Focus" articles, 1961-1983
"East Asia Development and Change", 1975
"A New Map of Nepal", 1983
"Environmental Stress in the Himalayas", 1985
"Adoptions of Family Planning and Modern Preventative Healthcare Services in Rural India", 1987
"Environmental Movements in India", 1993
"Environmental Management and Sustainable Development: Global Perspectives and Policies", 1996
"Environment, Economic, and Social Consequences of Tourism in Developing Countries: A Case Study of Nepal", undated
"Public Awareness of Environmental Problems in Calcutta Metro Area", undated
Encyclopedia articles on Bhutan, 1979
Draft maps for "Slum Dwellers and Squatters Images of Patna India", 1980
"Development of Geographic Thought in India", 1993
"Social Scientists Look at the Japanese Landscape", 1994
"Fieldwork in Japan", 1994
Cotton Mather memorial, 2002
"RDD: Environmental Security and Regional Development", 2002
Unpublished drafts, 1963-1984, undated
"Bhutan Expedition Report" to the United States Army (2 folders), 1963
"Development Patterns in Sikkim: A Study in Geographical Consequences of Smallness" (2 folders), 1975
"The Changing Fate of the Caretakers for the Explorers and Trekkers in the Central Himalayas of Nepal", undated
"Sikkim Himalaya: Development in a Mountain Environment," with Shigeru Iijima, cartography by Gyula Pauer, Institute for the Study of Asia and Africa, Tokyo, 1984
Printed Materials, 1933-2005, undated
Scope and Contents
Contains secondary research materials in textual form collected by Karan throughout his career, including a significant collection of materials related to efforts to free Tibet from Chinese control and on Sikkim and Nepal in the 1960s.
Tibet, 1966-1992, undated
International Campaign for Tibet individuals and resource directory, undated
Correspondence with various Tibetan-related organizations, 1989-1992
Addresses and form letter to encourage better treatment of Tibet, undated
Free Tibet protest posters, 1989
Newsletters/Action Alerts from the International Campaign for Tibet, 1989
Press releases from The Office of Tibet and the International Campaign for Tibet, 1987-1992
Notes, clippings, articles about Tibet, 1975-1992
Assorted pamphlets on Tibet, undated
Assorted newsletters and reports on Tibet, 1966-1992
International Campaign for Tibet "Environment and Development News", 1992 May-August
"Tibet Brief" [International Committee of Lawyers for Tibet], 1990 fall-1992 summer
"The Tibet Society Newsletter" (incomplete), 1974 August-1976 August
"Tibetan Review" (incomplete), 1978 January-1992 October
"Tibetan Bulletin" (incomplete), 1988 October-1991 July
"NewsTibet" (incomplete), 1983-1992
"Tibet Press Watch" (incomplete, 3 folders), 1988-1992
Bhutan, China, the Himalaya, India, Nepal, and Sikkim, 1961-2005, undated
Himalaya Digital File Map, data base, Version 2, 1994
"Bhutan Business Digest", telephone directory, pamphlet, 1982
Sikkim tourism brochure, undated
US government publications on Nepal, 1964-1965
Nepal tourism and promotional materials, 1963-1983
"Nepal and Her Prospects," Achyut B.John, undated
"Nepal Bibliography: Historical and Political," Asad Husain, 1966
"Nepal Panchayat Democracy: A Progress Report", 1965-1966
"Budget Speech of the Fiscal Year 1966-67," Nepal, 1966-1967
Establishment of Namgyal Institute of Tibetology, documents and speeches, 1961
"Center for Modern China Newsletter", 1991 Dec., 1992 April/May/July
Assorted pamphlets on India, undated
"Center for Study of Man and Environment Annual Report", 1979
"Survey of Indian Industry" [published by The Hindu], 2005
"Survey of Indian Agriculture" [published by The Hindu], 2005
Travel materials for Phnom Penh and Cambodia, undated
"The Virtues of Resignation", 2001
Other, 1933-1980s, undated
International Fund for Agricultural Development, undated
"Montfort Study" by Vernor C. Finch, gift from Cotton Mather, 1933
Multinational Enterprise in Brazilian Geographic Development: 1968-1978, James Ray Wilson, dissertation, 1984
"The Comprehensive Planning Process: Several Views", 1975
"Pioneer County Geographical Societies of America", 1972
"Himal" magazine proposal, 1980s
National-Southwire Aluminum Company brochure Hawesville, KY, 1970s
General Photographs, 1957-2008, undated
Scope and Contents
Includes photos documenting life on the University of Kentucky campus and in the geography department, Karan's personal life and travels, and photos utilized in publications. Prominent holdings include a complete set of headshots for the two-volume Leaders in American Geography and photos from early County Geographical Society meetings.
Personal photographs, undated
University of Kentucky, 1970-1999
Promotional photographs for the Department of Geography, 1970s
Promotional photographs for The Atlas of Kentucky, 1975
Department of Geography "Newsletter" photos, 1994
Senator Bob Dole on campus, 1976
Japan City Conference (with negatives), 1995
Japan City Conference fieldtrip, 1995
Japanese Cultural Events at UK Student Center, 1998-1999
Japan in the Bluegrass conference [Official UK photos], 1999
Japan in the Bluegrass conference [amateur photos], 1999
Karan with graduating student [negatives only], 1970s
UK Japan Field Seminar in Nagasaki, Japan, 1998
UK students in the Himalayan Mountains, 1990s
Assorted photos [may include photos of the first Semple day [1972], 1970s
Various geographical societies, 1970-1989
Photographs of Karan and others at the Pierce County Geographical Society in Prescott, WI, 1978
Photographs of Pierce County Geographical Society meeting, 1970s
Group photograph of the Third International Conference of Geographical Societies, 1980
PP Karan and John Hudson, medal recipients, 1980
Medal recipients, including Cotton Mather, Yi-Fu Tuan, Marvin Mikesell, Preston James, John Hudson, John Fraser Hart, and Hildegard Johnson, 1980
New Mexico Geographical Society fieldtrip [negatives only], 1980s?
Pierce County Geographical Society expedition to the Himalayas, 1985
Activities with other geographers, 1976-1989, undated
Geographers involved with the planning for American Geographical Thought: A Kentucky Root book, AAG session, 1976
AAG Meeting, Baltimore [with negatives], 1989
Patina University, undated
Travels with Cotton Mather in Japan [with negatives], 1985
Photographs of other geographers, undated
Headshots of geographers for Leaders in American Geography Series, undated
Other travels, 1970-2000
Turkey [with negatives] (3 folders), 1970s
Southern Japan/Hiroshima contact sheets and negatives, 1985
Urban Japan: Nikko, Tokyo, Okinawa, Takayama Matsumoto, Toyota City, and others contact sheets, 1985
Rural Japan and Aomori City, 1985
Japan negatives, 1985
Budapest, Hungary, 1980s
Randam Colony, Larasaul, Patanix Lalper, Bhoods India [contact sheets and negatives], 1999-2000
Images for books and articles, 1957-2008, undated
Across the Appalachian Mountains, 1991
Kentucky: A Regional Geography, 1973
Photos given to David Zurick for the Illustrated Atlas of the Himalayas of Assam Arunachal/Ziro Valley, 2006
Nepal: A Physical and Cultural Geography, 1960
Nepal: A Physical and Cultural Geography [photos not used], 1960
Nepal: A Physical and Cultural Geography tracings, 1960
The Changing Face of Tibet, 1976
Art and Geography: Patterns in the Himalayas, 1976
The Himalayan Kingdoms tracings, 1963
Bhutan: Environment, Culture, and Development Strategy drawings, 1990
Environmental Stress in the Himalayas, 1985
Clippings and maps for Japanese Megapolis, undated
Local Environmental Movements, 2008
The Non-Western World: Environment, Development and Human Rights (Sri Lanka, Bangladesh, Pakistan, Africa), 2004
Nepal map materials, 1957
Nepal cartographic sources, 1957
Unidentified book photos for Japan, undated
Sketches of Bhutan, Nepal, and Sikkim, undated
The Atlas of Kentucky, 1978, undated
The Atlas of Kentucky images used, 1978
The Atlas of Kentucky image negatives, 1978
Purchase Region (unused), undated
Pennyroyal (unused), undated
Bluegrass (unused) (2 folders), undated
Horse Farms (unused), undated
Nature scenes (unused), undated
Assorted (unused), undated
Assorted other photographs, 1980-2006, undated
Photographs of Japanese companies in KY, 1980s
Arunachal India/Bhutan, 1980s
Anneehel, Pradesh India, 1980s
Nepal, undated
Sikkim, undated
India, undated
Functional areas of Tokyo, undated
Japanese Cities, undated
Photos of art in the Himalayas [with negatives], undated
Saidpur [with negatives], undated
Simla, India, undated
Castles/rural areas Japan, 1998-2003
Nepal, undated
Negatives of mountains and maps, undated
Closed storefronts and signs in Japan with translations on back, 2006
Tibetan monetary views, 1985
Tibet, undated
Tibet negatives, undated
Bhutan negatives, undated
Fieldwork Photographs from Nepal/Sikkim/Bhutan, 1954-1983, undated
Labeled materials, 1954-1983, undated
"Harsh Lands and Hardy People"--unpublished photographs of Bhutan with captions, 1962
Label from large format photographs of "Harsh Lands and Hardy People" (duplicate large format photographs not kept), 1983
Sikkim expedition photographs--unpublished photographs of Sikkim without captions, 1960s
United States (US) Aid Mission to Nepal, 1968
United Nations aid in Nepal, Toni Hagen (Swiss geologist), 1954
Karan, other expedition members, Sikkim royalty, undated
Photographs not taken by Karan, 1960s, undated
Fractional numbers, 1960s, undated
Scope and Contents
Karan utilized a numbering systems of fractions (a fractional system) to organize the bulk of his fieldwork photos for Bhutan and Sikkim. This subseries is arranged by the numerator of the fraction first, then by the denominator second. Photos come in both 3 inch by 4 inch contact prints and 9.5 inch by 12 inch full prints. Neither format is comprehensive; reviewing both groups will provide the most complete set of photos.
Numerator 1 (57 individual 3" x 4" and 12 individual 9.5" x 12"), 1960s
Numerator 2 (97 individual 3" x 4" and 45 individual 9.5" x 12"), 1960s
Numerator 3 (58 individual 3" x 4" and 115 individual 9.5" x 12"), 1960s
Numerator 4 (45 individual 3" x 4" and 24 individual 9.5" x 12"), 1960s
Numerator 5 (22 individual 3" x 4" and 62 individual 9.5" x 12"), 1960s
Numerator 6 (40 individual 3" x 4" and 76 individual 9.5" x 12"), 1960s
Numerator 7 (72 individual 3" x 4" and 48 individual 9.5" x 12"), 1960s
Numerator 8 (32 individual 3" x 4" and 6 individual 9.5" x 12"), 1960s
Numerator 9 (14 individual 3" x 4" and 13 individual 9.5" x 12"), 1960s
Numerator 10 (25 individual 3" x 4" and 10 individual 9.5" x 12"), 1960s
Numerator 11 (16 individual 3" x 4" and 22 individual 9.5" x 12"), 1960s
Numerator 12 (39 individual 3" x 4" and 36 individual 9.5" x 12"), 1960s
Numerator 13 (55 individual 3" x 4" and 39 individual 9.5" x 12"), 1960s
Numerator 14 (35 individual 3" x 4" and 38 individual 9.5" x 12"), 1960s
Numerator 15 (55 individual 3" x 4" and 60 individual 9.5" x 12"), 1960s
Numerator 16 (19 individual 3" x 4" and 6 individual 9.5" x 12"), 1960s
Numerator 17 (2 individual 3" x 4" and 15 individual 9.5" x 12"), 1960s
Captioned Bhutan photographs for expedition report, 1963, undated
Scope and Contents
In 1963, Karan submitted a report to the United States Army documenting his work in Bhutan (The full copy of the report, "Bhutan Expedition Report" can be found in the Unpublished Drafts Subseries of the Publications Series [Series VIII.]). The report included fieldwork photographs with captions. The list of captions can be found in the first folder of this subseries. The archivist matched the photographs found in the Fractional Numbers Photographs Subseries (Subseries C) with the captions to create the Captioned Bhutan Photographs subseries. These captioned photographs may also be used as a proxy to navigate the full Fractional Numbers Photographs Subseries. For example, Photo 1 (Paro Valley) has a fractional code of 3/1. The other photographs labeled with the number 3/1 are generally about Paro Valley even though they are not captioned as such.
List of captions for photographs of Southern Bhutan, Central Bhutan, Thimbu Valley, and Paro Valley
Southern Bhutan
1. The Bhutan Duars, Samchi district, about 2 miles west of Tori Bari. Dry bed of River Daina in background.
2. The Torsa River, 1 and 1/2 miles north of Phuntsholing, as it leaves the Himalayan foothills and enters the Duars Plain.
3. The Indo-Bhutan road, north of Phuntsholing, in the Himalayan foothills.
4. New settlements on the outskirts of Phuntsholing.
5. Bhutan distillery, Samchi district, in the Duars near Tori Bari. This is the only significant industrial establishment in Bhutan.
6. Himalayan foothills near Phuntsholing. View from the Chief Engineer's bungalow, Phuntsholing.
7. The Himalayan foothills and Phuntsholing (middle left) from the Chief Engineer's bungalow, Phuntsholing.
11. Newly-built hospital in Samchi district, Bhutan, near the Indian border.
13. The Residency, Gangtok, Sikkim. {Officic1l residence of the Indian Political Officer to Sikkim and Bhutan). Formerly occupied by the British Political Officers.
17. View of Phuntsholing, located on the Torsa River. Foothills border the area from all sides except the south.
18. A close-up view of the settlements at Phuntsholing. Most of the large buildings contain offices of the Bhutan government. The large building, bottom left, is the official guest house.
20. Patches of cultivated land in the forested Bhutan Duars, near Hatisar.
21. Profile of the foothills as it merges into the Duars Plain, near Phuntsholing.
22. The fast growing settlement of Phuntsholing. The Indo-Bhutan road to Paro starts from this place.
23. Phuntsholing, Bhutan. The late Prime Minister Dorji was assassinated in the large house in center.
26. Bamboo, an important product of the Duars and foothills, is used for making a variety of useful articles. This worker is splitting the bamboo near Phuntsholing.
34. Indian magazines are for sale at this newsstand in Phuntsholing. These are bought almost entirely by Indian merchants and officials residing in Phuntsholing.
37. Temporary shelters being erected (behind trees) for engineers working on the widening of the Indo-Bhutan road, ten miles from Phuntsholing.
39. Phuntsholing, new market area on the right, police and military barracks on the left.
40. Rows of rest houses in Phuntsholing for the porters coming from the interiors. Each rest house provides overnight accommodation for several persons.
41. View of the Military barracks and camps in Phuntsholing. This is used as a brief resting place for Indian military convoys going into Central Bhutan.
48. Oranges are brought in baskets from the interior on foot for sale in Phuntsholing.
56. Indo-Bhutan road at Kamji, Western Bhutan.
57. The Indo-Bhutan road as it cuts across the Himalayan foothills. On the left Duars Plain. Photographed near Kharbari.
61. At the end of the day's work some of the road construction workers (Nepalese men) ride the truck to their camp. Photographed near Chhukha Dzong.
67. Eastern Bhutan Duars, east of Dewangiri. Most of the area is forested with scattered patches of cultivated land.
70. A corner inside the home of a well-to-do Nepalese settler in southwestern Bhutan. The large brass pots on the top are used only for special feasts. Tin cans on the shelf contain food, spices, sugar, etc. Water is brought from the stream in large tin cans with handles (lower left), and is stored in big barrels for domestic use. Photographed at Honka.
74. Nepalese boy. Taga Dzong.
79. Kitchen in the Bhutanese home. The bed is made close to the oven on the floor during winter in order to keep warm. Chochoka.
82. Torsa River and Phuntsholing as seen from the forested foothills on the east of Phuntsholing.
86. The densely forested region of the lower Manas Valley near the Indian border.
89. Settlements are perched on the hill slopes, south of Chimakothi. Buddhist prayer flags keep the evil spirits away.
95. Bhutan government rest house along the Indo-Bhutan Road near Honka. These are for the use of government and army officials as overnight stops.
97. Prayer flags on the hillside near Chamadung, Eastern Bhutan.
100. Indo-Bhutan road, near Honka.
Central Bhutan
1. Eastern Bhutanese, photographed at Tashigang.
3. Bhutanese woman photographed at Thebang, Eastern Bhutan
11. A Bhutanese sewing. Photographed in the Thimbu market.
13. Buddhist prayers inscribed in stone on the wall. Photograph at Lhungtso Kunra, West Central Bhutan.
17. A chorten on the trail to Ha Valley. Photographed near Getta Deong.
18. Workers building the foundation for the construction of a rest house at Chimakothi, on the Indo-Bhutan road.
21. The southern section of the Paro Chu Valley a few miles upstream from the Confluence. The Valley narrows considerably to the South. The river flows past the houses in the left center.
22. A typical landscape in the narrow Inner Himalayan valleys of Central Bhutan. Terraced cultivated land on the lower slopes of the mountains. Mo Chu Valley, north of Wangdu Phodrang.
23. Manas River west of Tashigang, Eastern Bhutan.
24. Bhutanese merchant with his mules laden with different articles. Photographed at Raga, Wong Chu Valley.
26. A typical Bhutanese boy with native costume. Photographed in Ha Valley.
27. Bhutanese lady wearing the native costume. Photographed near Punakha.
30. A Bhutanese boy carries his baby brother on his back. Tashi Chho Dzong.
34. Four porters who worked for the expedition in Wong Chu Valley. The women are wearing their traditional costume. All the materials are home-spun and colorful. Bhutanese women wear beads and amulets to keep evil spirits away. Sometimes they tie the key to their valuables in these beads (woman on the right).
35. Another group of porters who worked for the expedition in Wong Chu Valley. These Bhutanese women wearing hats are from the eastern part of the Kingdom. The woman on the right wears a lock with her beads.
39. A few miles downstream from the Confluence, the Wong Chu (lower left) flows through high mountains. The newly built Indo-Bhutan Road follows the middle slopes of the mountains (right).
40. The Indo-Bhutan Road, west of Bunakha, passes through an extremely rugged area. Photograph shows the road fill (center) on the shoulder. Caving in of the highway is a major problem in such areas.
41. Indo-Bhutan Road as it skirts the forested mountains in Central Bhutan. The Wong Chu flows (lower right) below the road.
44. Indo-Bhutan Road at Lomakha. Small settlements each with a plot of cultivated land can be seen on the mountain top.
45. Close-up view of Lomakha village.
46. Indo-Bhutan Road near Chhukha Dzong.
47. Near Chukha Dzong the new Indo-Bhutan Road crosses the Wong Chu on the Mathur Bridge. Photograph shows the new road (left) as it approaches the bridge, and again (right) as it follows the other side of the valley after crossing the bridge. Note an isolated settlement and patches of cultivated land. This part of Bhutan is very sparsely settled.
51. Unpaved surface of the road at Paro.
60. Wong Chu just below the Mathur Bridge.
62. These abandoned homes in Central Bhutan indicate either of two things. First, in many cases the occupants have been conscripted by the government for construction projects, particularly road work. Some have moved out on their own. Second, in some instances abandoned homes indicate depopulation; in other words after the death of the last occupant having no survivor or relatives the home becomes abandoned. Photographed near Punakha.
63. A Bhutanese travels with a load on the trail to Thimbu.
64. At Tsalimaphe, south of Thimbu, the main road goes south to the Confluence; another road, on the overpass, leads eastward to Wangdu Phodrang.
65. A new bridge on the Paro Chu on the new road to Paro.
71. A close-up view of the Mathur Bridge. The bridge is guarded by the military personnel at each end.
72. Side view of the Mathur Bridge as it crosses the Wong Chu.
74. Gyalunga. A house belonging to a rich Bhutanese merchant on the road to Thimbu.
75. Overgrazed mountainsides near Lumi Sampa. The road leads to Thimbu.
78. Close-up of a shop window. Shoppers buy at this window counter. Shop just below Sintoka Dzong,
79. A panoramic view of the Paro Valley near Changtungka.
80. The narrow Wong Chu Valley near Raga. Indo-Bhutan Road on the left.
82. A close-up view of the Sintoka Dzong. It occupies a dominating position.
83. Do Kyong La, the highest point on the Thimbu Wangdu Phodrang Road.
84. Do Kyang La. The food drop zone is located on the adjoining mountains. Grain is stored in this building for distribution to the road construction workers.
85. Do Kyong La. Food drop zone. Huts belong to the workers stationed here.
87. Central Paro Valley and Uchan. Fertile soils, which are intensely cultivated, characterize the narrow valleys of the Inner Himalaya
97. Another Tibetan family having lunch, near Simu Dzong. There are several thousand refugees from Tibet in Bhutan.
99. A Bhutanese merchant from the eastern part of the country, photographed at Tongsa Dzong.
100. An eastern Bhutanese merchant with his mule, near Tongsa Dzong.
103. Indo-Bhutan road, near Sigyak Nang.
105. A house of a wealthy Bhutanese in lower Paro Valley, near Dorbi.
106. Isolated settlements in Tang Chu Valley, near Lunggang.
108. Dochula. The small outpost on the ridge top were built by the early rulers of Bhutan to guard the route linking Thimbu and Wangdu Phodrang.
110. The northern part of the Thimbu Valley, near Changri.
111. Dochula. Prayer flags along the old trail to Thimbu. On the ridge top (left) are defensive outposts used to guard the trail in early times.
116. Cultivated terraces on hillside near Byakar Dzong.
117. Wong Chu Valley near Simu Dzong.
118. A new school house near Simu Dzong.
119. Wong Chu Valley, near Jamdo.
120. Wong Chu, near Ramtopla.
122. The new east-west road across Bhutan which is under construction. Picture near Dochula.
125. A Nepalese settler of South Bhutan working on road construction near Pele la. Nepalese are not permitted to settle in central highlands of Bhutan.
Thimbu Valley
1. Thimbu Valley. River Thimbu in foreground; New School and hospital center right.
3. Thimbu Valley. A new township will be built on the sloping land across the river. Military parade ground across the river, and training area on the left. Engineer's office in foreground.
5. Newly constructed wing of the Tashi Chho Dzong which will house the offices of Bhutan Government.
6. Newly-built wing of the Tashi Chho Dzong.
7. Part of the newly-built Tashi Chho Dzong.
8. The characteristic pattern of roof in Bhutan. Stones hold the wooden boards in place. Part of the newly-built Tashi Chho Dzong.
9. Part of the old Tashi Chho Dzong. The old Dzong is being torn down, and a new Dzong is being built on the site.
10. Central tower of the old Tashi Chho Dzong which contains the monastery.
11. Uchi (central tower) of the Tashi Chho Dzong (right) and the outer structure of the old Dzong being torn down.
12. A full view of the Uchi (central tower) at Tashi Chho Dzong.
17. Across the Thimbu River is the new school (within fence), In the background is the hospital. Note one of the old bridges on the Thimbu River at Thimbu.
18. View of the Thimbu River and the Valley from Tashi Chho Dzong. Note the traditional covered bridge on Thimbu River and its characteristic construction.
19. View of Thimbu settlement from Tashi Chho Dzong.
20. "Main Street" of Thimbu, Tashi Chho Dzong in the background. Note the Buddhist prayer flag poles. The telephone and electric light posts came to Thimbu in late 1964.
22. Entrance to the King's Royal Palace at Thimbu.
23. Inner gate leading to the King's Palace at Thimbu. Note the Buddhist prayer flag.
24. The King's Palace, Thimbu.
25. Palace cook, Thimbu
34. Shows the foundation of the new Dzong under construction at Thimbu
35. Bringing heavy wooden beams used in construction of new Dzong at Thimbu by truck, a recent development in Bhutan.
41. Bhutanese boy. Thimbu.
44. Lamas playing musical instruments at a religious service. Tashi Chho Dzong.
51. Mr. J. M. Utarid, an Indian Engineer. Assisting Dzong construction project at Thimbu.
55. View of Thimbu Valley with the Thimbu river and Tashi Chho Dzong. The trail on the right goes to Paro.
Paro Valley
2. Paro Valley. Paro Dzong at right. Road crosses the valley flat. King's palace in center of the valley.
3. Paro Market. Paro.
5. Paro Valley. Paro Chu (river) flows through the central part of the valley flat.
7. Paro Valley narrows considerably about 4 miles south of Paro Dzong.
8. Paro Valley. North of Dorbi.
10. Paro Valley at Kumku.
12. Paro Valley. View looking northward.
13. Paro Valley. Three miles north of Paro Dzong.
16. Close-up view of Paro Dzong. Bhutan's National Assembly meets here. Also offices of the Bhutan Government are temporarily located in this dzong.
17. Paro Dzong in the distance, Prime Minister's residence in the foreground, and King's Palace (with Pagoda-like roof) in center of the valley.
21. Close-up view of the home shown in 20. Note the Buddhist chorten on right.
24. A Bhutanese photographed at Paro.
26. Close-up view of King's Palace. A smaller tributary stream (from right) joins Paro in the center.
27. A new guest-house under construction at Paro.
31. Paro Valley near Chang La.
40. Entrance to Paro Dzong.
42. Courtyard of Paro Dzong. Lamas reside in the wing shown here.
43. Pillars and walls of the Paro Dzong are painted by lamas in elaborate fashion.
Photographs arranged by geography
Expedition photographs utilized in publications
Photographs arranged by archivist by subject or format
Assembled panoramic views
Unassembled panoramic views
Mountain views
Urban scenes
Rural scenes
Flora and fauna
Headshots and portraits
Bharatpar, India
Nepal?
Sikkim?
Royal Family of Sikkim [photocopies]
Cut Bhutan photos
Nepal?
Unknown [color photos]
Unknown [black-and-white photos]
"Then and Now" Photographs of the Himalaya, 1985?-2004, undated
Scope and Contents
Contains photos selected by Karan from his fieldwork photos (in Series XI). Karan organized these photographs into sets with Roman numerals. Within the sets, captions for the photographs included the phrase, "then and now". These photos are assumed to have been for a proposed publication on change in the Himalaya Mountain environment. There are no "Now" photos present. However, there is a folder of more recent photographs taken by geographer David Zurich. There is some overlap between this Series and the Fieldwork Photographs Series. However, this Series also includes photographs that are not present in the Fieldwork Photographs Series.
Roman Numeral I
Great Himalaya
Midlands
Tarai
Corridors of travel
Human settlement patterns
Great Himalaya-rejects
Middle Himalaya-rejects
Tarai-rejects
Human Settlement Patterns Sedentary Villages-Rejects
Roman Numeral II
Contested Landscapes
Agricultural Landscapes: Livestock and Pasture
Agricultural Landscapes: Farm and Terraces
Sacred Landscapes: Sacred Buildings, Pilgrimages sites, prayer flags, wheels, mani walls
Cultural Organization of the Land: Islam
Cultural Organization of the Land: Pahani
Cultural Organization of the Land: Tibetan
Cultural Organization of the Land: Hindu
Village Landscapes
Architecture and the Use of Space: Dwellings
Cultural Organization of the Land: General
Hindu Cultural Area-rejects
Tibetan Cultural Area-rejects
Pahari Cultural Area-rejects
Agricultural Landscapes: Farm and Terraces-rejects
Village Landscapes: public spaces-rejects
Village Landscapes: health and shops-rejects
Religious Practitioners-rejects
Hindu Temples-rejects
Chorten/stupa-rejects
Tibetan Temples/Dzangs-rejects
Architecture and the Use of Space-rejects
Refugees and Migrant Workers-reject
Religious markers on the land (maniwalls/prayer flags/prayer wheels)-rejects
Roman Numeral III
Landscapes of Movement
Border Landscapes
Modernity: International Development Assistance
Education
Tourism
Industrialization and Communications
Commercial Enterprises
Colonial Landscapes
Resource Extraction
Degraded Land
Landscapes Under Preservation
Modernity: Landscapes of Authority
Modernity: Markets
Sacred Landscapes: Religious Practitioners
Landscapes of Movement-rejects
International Development Assistance-rejects
Education-rejects
Tourism-rejects
Industrialization and Communications-rejects
Commercial Enterprises-rejects
Colonial Landscapes-rejects
Resource Extraction-rejects
Degraded Landscapes-rejects
Landscapes of Authority-rejects
Markets-rejects
Roman Numeral IV
Slides, 1955-2003, undated
Notes for slides, 1981, undated
Sikkim, 1962-1964
Nepal, 1960-1989
Bhutan, 1964-1985
Kashmir, 1974
Indian Himalayas, 1964-1985, undated
Kathmandu Nepal, undated
Indian Himalayas, undated
Sikkim/Nepal, undated
Religious art deities, undated
Assorted, undated
Association of American Geographers annual meeting, 1990
Semple Day, 1975
Event, Social Science Building fire, 1966, 1967
Karan and friends, 1997, undated
Switzerland conference, 1984
Switzerland conference, 1984
Geographers in the USSR, 1976
Assorted geographers, 1961-1981
Tennessee, 1955
Coal mining in Bihar and Chotanagpur India, 1982
"How Coal is Mined", undated
Sikkim, 1965, 1968
Moscow State University [Novosti Press Agency], undated
Moscow, USSR, 1976
USSR countryside/Volga River, 1976
Mt. Everest base camps India/Nepal, undated
Sri Lanka: Colombo and Chorter, 1998
Sri Lanka: Mosques, fields, elephants, Kandy, 1998
Assorted international slides, undated
Assorted Japan view, undated
Bhutan environment, 1985
San Jose, Costa Rica and Guatemala City, Guatemala/Israel, 1973, 1995
Japan, temples and city views, 1980-2003
Tibet views and maps, 1996-2003
Japanese investment in Kentucky, undated
Great Britain and France, 1964
Paris, 1973
Southern Europe: Spain, Greece, Italy, 1964
Switzerland and Alps, 1973
Switzerland, 1984
Mount Fuji, Noto Pen, Saigawa River, Kanazara, 1994-2003
Kyush, Yasuhiro, San Maede, Wajim, Hokkaido, Kawabe Japan, 2003
Kanazawa Historic District and other Japan slides, 2003
People's Republic of China "The Rural Commune" Parkway Media Inc (see transcript, folder 1), 1981
Unidentified partial set of slides from Parkway Media, Inc, undated
Provence, France, and Saxony, Germany, by Cotton Mather, 1997
Eastern Kentucky University, Lexington, Louisville, North Carolina by Karl Raitz (?), 1957-1995
Japan?, 1984
Pashupatinthi, Bhatgaon, Bansbam Village, undated
Patan, undated
Kathmandu, undated
Kathmandu, undated
Temple Scenes, undated
Balaju, Chobra Gorge, buildings, people doing activities, cheetah, Hazel Karan, undated
Aerial photos and maps, undated
Rural Nepal and Agriculture, undated
Nepal negatives (6 boxes), undated
Nepal negatives (uncut, one sleeve), undated
Photographs of women in publications, undated
Assorted scenes Bhutan, 1958, 1985, 1998, undated
Nepal, 1973-1974
India, 1973-1974, undated
Pakistan, undated
Rural Japan, 1986-2003
Film, Audio, and Special Format Media, 1965-1973, undated
Scope and Contents
This series contains two films created from footage Karan took in Bhutan and Sikkim, A Kingdom in the Clouds: Bhutan (1965) and Where the Mountains are God: Sikkim (1968). There is no complete show print for Where the Mountains are God: Sikkim. Thus, the parts that would be utilized to make the final film are in subseries A (Show prints and completed film). Subseries B (B-roll and outtakes) comprises B-roll, outtakes, and drafts for these films. Subseries C comprises 35 mm film, while Subseries D includes audio recordings and magnetic film. In total, there are 32 cans of film: 9 reels of 800' 16mm; 4 reels of 800' 35 mm; 2 reels of 600' 16mm; 14 reels of 200' 16 mm; and 3 audio reels.
Show prints and completed film, 1965-1968
A Kingdom in the Clouds: Bhutan, 1965
Where the Mountains are God: Sikkim, a-roll, 1968
Where the Mountains are God: Sikkim, music 1, 1968
Where the Mountains are God: Sikkim, music 2, 1968
Where the Mountains are God: Sikkim, narration, 1968
B-roll and outtakes
Sikkim audio negative track
Sikkim rough cut reel 2
The Sikkim Himalayas
Sikkim B-roll original
Sikkim Himalaya draft
A Kingdom in the Clouds: Bhutan [magnetic audio tape 1]
A Kingdom in the Clouds: Bhutan [magnetic audio tape 2]
A Kingdom in the Clouds: Bhutan [magnetic audio tape 3]
Work print trims first barrel
Flutes
Music
Woman singing
High flute
Scout blood
SC5
Various flowers
Lady with prayer wheel
Map of Sikkim/South Central Asia
Good quiet guitar
Man singing
Still photos, Sikkim Himalaya
Flute
Music
German language narration of man singing
35 mm film, 1965
Maps, 1946-1983, undated
Manuscript Maps Collected by Karan, 1946-1980, undated
Sikkim Bazar manuscript, traced maps (see also hand-drawn and maps for production in box 23), 1946-1960
Production Materials for Maps Made by Karan, 1969-1983
The Kingdom of Sikkim, 1969
Sikkim Himalaya, 1982
The Kingdom of Nepal, 1983
Japan 1:4,000,000 map production materials, 1985
Maps Annotated by Karan, 1960-1977
Patna, India, 1961-1965?, undated
Traced map of Patna, undated
Traced map of Patna, annotations, undated
Existing Land Use, Survey and Master Plan of Patna, 1961
Exisiting Population Densities, Survey and Master Plan of Patna, 1961
Patna Town, 1965
Yokohama Japan Land Use Maps, 1960-1977
Pollution Maps, 1963-1974, undated
Other Maps, undated
Tectonic Map of the Himalaya, undated
Tectonic Map of the Himalaya, list and legend, undated
The Nepal Valley, undated
Tibet, Territorial-Administrative Organization, 1974
Historical Evolution of the Himalaya, 1972
Painted showcard (for movie?) of Bhutan, undated
Painted showcard (for movie?) of the political geography of the Himalaya, undated
Phari Dzong (United States Army Map Service map loaned to Karan), 1963
Karan-Created Maps and Illustrations
Manuscript maps, undated
Illustrations, 1955, undated
Sikkim Bazar maps: hand-drafted (see also manuscript, traced maps collected by Karan in Folder OS 1), undated
Rongphu Bazar, undated
Gangtok Bazar, East Sikkim Headquarters, undated
Naya Bazar, undated
Namchi Bazar, South Sikkim Headquarters, undated
Gyalzing Bazar, West Sikkim Headquarters, undated
Jorethang, South District, undated
Singtam, undated
Mangan Bazar, North, undated
Sikkim Bazar maps for production (see also manuscript, traced maps collected by Karan in Folder OS 1), undated
UK Libraries Special Collections Research Center is open Monday to Friday, 9:00am to 4:00pm. Appointments are encouraged but not required. Schedule an appointment here.
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Table of Contents
- Abstract
- Descriptive Summary
- Collection Overview
- Preferred Citation
- Restrictions on Access and Use
- Contents of the Collection
- Awards, Curriculum Vitae, and Personal Files, 1956-2016, undated
- Administrative Records, 1946-2012
- Correspondence and Personal Information, 1955-2012, undated
- Professional Organizations, Conferences, and Grants, 1957-2009, undated
- Teaching, 1971-2012, undated
- George Etsel Pearcy Papers, 1909-1979, undated
- Research Materials and Notes, 1967-1979, undated
- Publications, 1954-2010, undated
- Printed Materials, 1933-2005, undated
- General Photographs, 1957-2008, undated
- Fieldwork Photographs from Nepal/Sikkim/Bhutan, 1954-1983, undated
- "Then and Now" Photographs of the Himalaya, 1985?-2004, undated
- Slides, 1955-2003, undated
- Film, Audio, and Special Format Media, 1965-1973, undated
- Maps, 1946-1983, undated
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You may come across language in UK Libraries Special Collections Research Center collections and online resources that you find harmful or offensive. SCRC collects materials from different cultures and time periods to preserve and make available the historical record. These materials document the time period when they were created and the view of their creator. As a result, some may demonstrate racist and offensive views that do not reflect the values of UK Libraries.
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