Collection Spotlight: Reveal Digital

Posted in:

Posted on:

March 31, 2026, 9 a.m.
Explore Reveal Digital's open access collections of historical primary sources, giving new visibility to voices of dissent from throughout the 20th century.
A composite image of six historical photographs of protesters marching, shouting, and holding signs up.

by Rebecca Johnston, Social Science and Humanities Librarian

Reveal Digital is an open access project dedicated to making previously hidden materials from underrepresented communities freely available to everyone, everywhere. Curated by editorial boards of librarians, archivists, curators, professors and other subject experts, the project’s thematic collections are made up of digitized materials from libraries, museums, historical societies, advocacy groups and individual collectors.

Currently there are six collections available through Reveal Digital:

Several of the projects will continue to expand as new materials are added, and the next collection to be released will be Documenting White Supremacy and its Opponents in the 1920s.

Libraries and cultural institutions from around the world came together to fund these projects. Syracuse University contributed funding to two collections: Independent Voices and Documenting White Supremacy and its Opponents in the 1920s.

All the items in these collections are free to view and learn about for everyone. For tips on searching JSTOR’s platform, visit JSTOR Search Help. To provide feedback or suggest a title to add to the collection, please complete the Resource Feedback Form.

Back to posts

Next