
1. A Big Listening Project
1. A Big Listening Project
1. A Big Listening Project
1. A Big Listening Project
The Writers' Project in Nebraska (LIVE)
February 3, 2026 at 12:30 PM CST
Join us for a special virtual discussion about the Federal Writers’ Project in Nebraska.
Listen to a dynamic panel moderated by The People’s Recorder host and award-
winning historian and author Chris Haley.
The People’s Recorder launched in 2024 and won a 2025 Silver Signal Award for Best History Podcast. Using the 1930s Federal Writers’ Project as a lens to view our past, the podcast asks the questions: how does history get recorded and who gets to decide which history gets told?
This special virtual event will build on the discussion started in the podcast, and will further explore the work and literary and cultural legacy of the Federal Writers’ Project in Nebraska.
Part of the WPA, the Federal Writers’ Project provided work for unemployed writers, editors, and other white-collar workers during the height of the Great Depression. The Writers’ Project had a mandate to produce state and city travel guides, and interview everyday citizens.
It was perhaps the largest and most chaotic publishing venture in American history, and yet it produced over 200 publications, and its flagship travel guide series remains important for its firsthand views of life in America. The Nebraska guide was a notable success and state bestseller.
This moderated discussion will focus on the work of the Nebraska Writers’ Project and how that speaks to Nebraskans today. That includes the experiences of Rudolph Umland, a hardscrabble farmer turned editor, Weldon Kees, a hardware businessman’s son turned poet, and Ruby Wilson, a nurse who found a passion for recording first person history. We’ll also shine a light on acclaimed author of the Plains Mari Sandoz and University of Nebraska-Lincoln professor and founder of Prairie Schooner, Lowry Wimberly, whose influence was critical to the Project’s success.
This special event is produced with support from Humanities Nebraska in partnership with Prairie Schooner and Lincoln City Libraries.
Panelists

Stephen Cloyd, PhD
Stephen Cloyd earned a MA in history from the University of Nebraska and a PhD in history from the University of Rochester. While living in Lincoln, he was a long time employee of Lincoln City Libraries, where he enjoyed working in the Jane Pope Geske Heritage Room of Nebraska Authors. He inventoried and created archival guides for the Heritage Room's major Eiseley collections, and created web exhibits and archival guides for the Room's web site. He wrote all of the entries for the Heritage Room's short-lived blog. After working elsewhere in the library system, he returned part-time to the Heritage Room to assist then curator Erin Willis in the creation of a new website about Nebraska writers, Nebraskaauthors.org, a joint project between the Center for Digital Humanities at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln and Lincoln City Libraries. Nebraskaauthors.org received the Nebraska Library Association's 2018 Mari Sandoz Award for making a "significant, enduring contribution to the Nebraska book world." He retired from Lincoln City Libraries in 2024.

Marilyn Holt
Marilyn Holt is the author of Nebraska during the New Deal: The Federal Writers’ Project in the Cornhusker State, which won the 2020 Book of the Year award from the Nebraska Center for the Book. She has written seven other books on historical topics, including the award-winning Indian Orphanages in 2001, and has written numerous articles for history journals; including "Over the Hill to the Poorhouse" in Kansas History, which received the Kansas State Historical Society’s Edgar Langsdorf Award of Excellence in 2017, and “The Kansas Year of Celebrating Coronado” in Kansas History in 2024. Holt received her B.S. in Education with a major in History from Eastern Illinois University and a M.A. in History from the University of Illinois at Springfield.

David Taylor
David is an award-winning author who collaborated with Stone Soup as the lead writer and co-producer on the Soul of a People documentary. He wrote that documentary’s companion book, as well as four other books on historical topics. He has organized events at the Library of Congress and book festivals, has participated as a speaker at the National Book Festival, the FDR Library and Museum, the Smithsonian, and in podcasts, conferences and articles for the Los Angeles Times, CNN, and the Chicago Tribune. He teaches at Johns Hopkins University.
Moderated By

Chris Haley
Chris is the Host of The People's Recorder podcast and Director of Research, Education and Outreach and the Study of the Legacy of Slavery in Maryland at the Maryland State Archives, and a leading member of the Maryland Truth and Reconciliation Commission created by the State of Maryland. Haley is a member of the Kunta Kinte-Alex Haley Foundation, Historic London Town Foundation, Annapolis Arts Alliance Foundation and the Utopia and Annapolis Film Festivals. In addition to his genealogical and academic work, Haley was the co-director of the award-winning Unmarked, which explored historic African American cemeteries and efforts to restore their place in the historic landscape.
Also Featuring

Timothy Schaffer, PhD
Bio coming soon.

Deb Arenz
After decades of curatorial and administrative experience in Nebraska museums and nonprofits, Deb Arenz joined Lincoln City Libraries as Curator of the Heritage Room of Nebraska Authors in February 2025. She is thrilled to combine her experience in Nebraska history and collections management with her lifelong love of books and reading.
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