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Database Highlights & Trials

TECHNICAL DIFFICULTIES – PsycINFO

For those of you trying to find articles on psych topics, please note PsycINFO is currently out of order. The technical team behind the resource is aware of the problem and actively working on it. In the meantime, if you’re looking for psych articles, try using Summon. It includes all articles published by the American Psychological Association.

News & Events, O'Shaughnessy-Frey Library, Services

Cell Phone Charging Stations in the OSF Library!

charger

Is your cell phone almost out of battery power? Got to call home to mom? Forgot to bring your cell phone charger? Now you don’t have to worry when you’re in the Library!

The O’Shaughnessy-Frey Library now has two cell phone charging stations. One is located on the main floor by Coffee Bené and the other is by the Lower Level computer lab.

The charging stations can power 8 devices at once — 4 Apple (includes iPhone 5), 3 Micro, and 1 Mini. A 10 minute charge will produce a half hour of cell phone use.

 emily charger

 

 

 

News & Events

Harriet Bart artwork on display in the O’SF library

For the next few months, the O’SF library is please to present some of the art of Harriet Bart. A Minnesota native, Harriet Bart is a conceptual artist working across disciplines in a variety of media. She creates evocative content through the narrative power of objects, the intimacy of artists books, and the theater of installation. She has a deep and abiding interest in the personal and cultural expression of memory; it is at the core of her work.  You may link to Ms. Bart’s webpage here. The Art in the Library subject guide is here.

Bart’s work has been exhibited extensively throughout the United States and Germany. She has completed more than a dozen public art commissions in the United States, Japan, and Israel. She has won two Minnesota Book Awards and been the recipient of fellowships from Forecast Public Art, McKnight Foundation, Bush Foundation, MacDowell Colony, Virginia Center for the Creative Arts, NEA Arts Midwest, and the Minnesota State Arts Board. Her work is in many museum, university, and private collections, including: The Metropolitan Museum of Art, National Gallery of Art, Library of Congress, Walker Art Center, Minneapolis Institute of Arts, Weisman Art Museum, Jewish Museum, National Museum of Women in the Arts, and Sackner Archive of Visual and Concrete Poetry. Bart is a founding member of W.A.R.M. Gallery and Traffic Zone Center for Visual Art. She is represented by Driscoll Babcock, New York.

Here are some images of what you will find on the first floor of the O’SF library:

harriet3


harriet1

Database Highlights & Trials

HART Database Highlight: Oxford Islamic Studies Online

Database Highlight, on behalf of the UST Libraries’ “Humanities and Arts Round Table” (HART) – by Curt Le May, Library Liaison for Theology and Religious Studies.

UST Libraries recently lost a valued colleague, Dr. Terence Nichols, who was a theology professor at St. Thomas for 27 years, and passed away on April 12. Given that Dr. Nichols was the founder and Co-Director of the University’s Muslim-Christian Dialogue Center, I believe it is only appropriate that we highlight a database in the area of Islamic Studies in his honor…

Oxford Islamic Studies Online is an unparalleled resource for the study of the Islamic world including two translations of the Qur’an seamlessly combined with reference material, primary texts, hundreds of maps and images, interactive timelines, and more. For example, this source contains:

  • More than 6,000 articles encompassing all aspects of the Islamic world, giving students ready access to the most authoritative scholarship in the field.
  • The first and only electronic version of Hanna E. Kassiss’ Concordance of the Qur’an links to the sites of two translations of the Qur’an, offering the ability to access this essential text in a way no other Islamic Studies resource can.
  • 250+ primary source documents selected and translated by leading scholars include excerpts from seminal books, transcripts of speeches, fatwas, statements posted on Arabic internet sites and other sources.
  • Carefully selected links to trustworthy external websites saves students and researchers time investigating the validity of online sources.
  • Reference content and analysis by renowned scholars in global Islamic history, concepts, people, practices, politics, and culture.

 

Libraries, News & Events, O'Shaughnessy-Frey Library

Jim Rogers to read from his newly published book, May 7 at noon, in the O’Shaughnessy-Frey Library

jim rogers slideAll are invited to hear Jim Rogers speak about his new book of essays and poems, Northern Orchards: Places Near the Dead.   Join us at Noon on Wednesday, May 7 in the O’Shaughnessy Room of the O’Shaughnessy-Frey Library.   Please see the April 24th Newsroom article for complete details.               This event is free and open to all.  We hope to see you there!

Libraries, News & Events, O'Shaughnessy-Frey Library

Spanish Art and Music – May 6 in the O’Shaughnessy-Frey Library at noon

romanticaYou are all cordially invited to the final noonartsound of the spring season.   The presentation on May 6,  Romantica:  Spanish Art and Music of 1880-1910,  features the passionate images and sounds of  late 19th Century Spain.   From Goya to Granados and Gaudi to Albeniz, art historian Shelly Nordtorp-Madson and guitarist Chris Kachian will survey the intensely emotional creative work of Iberian Europe.                   Please join us!   

Noon to 1pm          Tuesday, May 6          O’Shaughnessy-Frey Library          O’Shaughnessy Room 108

Libraries, O'Shaughnessy-Frey Library

Emily Dickinson Marathon Friday April 25 begins at 8am in the O’Shaughnessy-Frey Library

The UST Libraries and English Department invite you to this Friday’s marathon reading of Emily Dickinson’s poetry.  Each of her poems will be read aloud,  No. 1 to No. 1,789.   Readers are invited to come and stay as long as desired.   Listeners are welcome too!     The marathon is free and all are welcome. Listen to a live audio stream of the marathon once the event is underway.

      – Emily Dickinson’s Signature        
“While we’re calling it a marathon, it’s not really a race to see how fast we can read aloud all of her poems,” explained Dr. Erika Scheurer, a Dickinson scholar who teaches writing and literature and directs the university’s Writing Across the Curriculum program. “The idea is to savor the language and live in the mystery of her poems. And to have some fun, too.”

Most of Dickinson’s poems are short and will take a minute or less to read. “When we did this six years ago, it took 14 hours to read them all, so the marathon will probably last until around 9 or 10 p.m.,” she estimated.

  • Emily Dickinson      – Emily Dickinson

    While some marathons like this feature scheduled celebrity readers and prominent scholars, “we like the idea of a more democratic marathon,” Scheurer said. “Everyone who shows up can join the circle of readers. It’s great to hear the poems in a variety of voices: a football player, then a college president, then a child, a professor, a neighbor, a first-year student going for extra credit, a senior citizen … .”

    The O’Shaughnessy Room, located on the main floor of St. Thomas’ O’Shaughnessy-Frey Library on the university’s St. Paul campus, is well-known on campus for its comfortable (sometimes nap-inducing) leather chairs.

    “If you want to read, you don’t have to bring anything … just show up. You can come and go as you please,” Scheurer said. “We sit in a circle and read the poems in turn. Six years ago we had more than 100 readers; it just grew and grew. I’m not aware of any other marathons that do it like that.”

    Readers on April 25 will use Ralph W. Franklin’s The Poems of Emily Dickinson. Common Good Books, located at Grand and Snelling avenues, donated 15 copies. All those attending the event are welcome to put their name in a box for a chance to win one of them at the end of the day. In addition to Common Good Books, other sponsors are St. Thomas’ Department of English, the Luann Dummer Center for Women, and the library.

    So no one gets weak from hunger, there’s a Coffee Bené outside the O’Shaughnessy Room. Other refreshments will include black cake and coconut cake, two Dickinson favorites. She was an accomplished cook who was especially good at breads and cakes. (You can see a photo of her handwritten coconut cake recipe here.)

    Scheurer and students in her graduate Dickinson seminar will have a number of posters and interactive displays on hand, including copies of some original manuscripts. She was known for writing many of her poems on scraps of paper or the backs of envelopes. While Dickinson is regarded as one of the United States’ best-known poets, fewer than a dozen of her works were published while she was alive. Most of her poems were found in a locked chest after her death in 1886, at the age of 55.

    In keeping with the times, one of Scheurer’s students has created a Dickinson Twitter account (https://twitter.com/EmDickinson101); another is creating a Pinterest page; and the library plans to have a live audio stream of the marathon on its website here.

    When Scheurer was a doctoral student the University of Massachusetts in Amherst, she wrote her dissertation on Dickinson and the teaching of writing. She remembers visiting the Dickinson home: “I had the opportunity to read a poem in her bedroom, where she wrote many of her poems, and I remember especially how tiny her writing table was.”

    April is National Poetry Month, a good time to hold a Dickinson marathon and recall her poem No. 278:

    A word is dead, when it is said
    Some say –
    I say it just begins to live
    That day

    If you have questions about the marathon, email Scheurer at ecscheurer@stthomas.edu.

Libraries, News & Events, O'Shaughnessy-Frey Library

Poetry on the Patio Tuesday, April 22 at Noon!

poetry month bottom Stop by – listen to your colleages from across campus share a poem or two that they love – and find out why they love it! Bring your lunch if you wish – bring a friend, too! It is the annual Poetry on the Patio where members of the St. Thomas community step away from their daily duties to share a poem that they love with all of us. See you out on the patio at noon today!