Library Blogs

Showing 1 - 10 of 16 items
Results for Date: April 2017
Photo of text reading: "Everything not saved will be lost." Nintendo "Quit Screen" message
  • Scott David Witmer
The first in a series of how-to guides helping you to preserve your personal files and archives!
portrait of Asa Gray bearing his signature
  • Eric Gregory Morgel
In this post, student Eric Morgel provides a brief overview of Asa Gray's foundational purchase of materials for the University Library.
Cover of Murakami's Kishidancho-gorōshi
  • Dawn Lawson
Looking for vacation reading? The popular Japanese novelist Murakami Haruki has published a new book.
books, boardgames, and maps on display for "Journeys, Real and Imagined" pop-up exhibit
  • Elizabeth Nicole Settoducato
A pop-up exhibit (or rare book meet and greet, as we later came to call them) is an informal, short-term display of Special Collections materials. We take our items outside of the Reading Room because we want as many people as possible to engage with our collections and ask our staff questions. This year, we held six of these exhibits in three locations within the Hatcher & Shapiro Libraries and we're excited to tell you what we've learned from a year of ephemeral events.
screenshot of michigan daily digital archive interface
  • Nabeela Jaffer
The Michigan Daily Digital Archives is a joint collaboration between the University of Michigan Library IT division, Michigan Daily, and the Bentley Historical Library. The Michigan Daily Digital Archives provides searchable access to over 300 volumes, 23,000 issues of digitized student newspaper, from 1891 through 2014. New volumes of the newspaper will be added in the future as they become available. The Library IT team developed a robust discovery interface for the archives. The team made the choice of building a discovery system instead of using an out of the box application or vended solutions. The development team followed Scrum-like Agile approach for website development.
Student drawn map of the Hatcher Graduate Library.
  • Emily Puckett Rodgers
It’s not uncommon for academic research libraries, especially large ones, to have multiple renovations that add a wing, a floor, or even a new building. The University of Michigan Library buildings on our central campus are no exception. Our undergraduate and graduate libraries form a complex whose structure is just that. Many times a day, staff members direct visitors, patrons, or even a colleague to their intended destination.
Photo of exhibit curators Emily Wilcox and Liangyu Fu
  • Dawn Lawson
Chinese Dance: National Movements in a Revolutionary Age, 1945-1965, our exhibit on the history of Chinese dance, is receiving lots of media coverage.
Cover of April Blood by Lauro Martines
  • Vicki J Kondelik
April Blood tells the story of a plot to assassinate Lorenzo de' Medici, unofficial ruler of Renaissance Florence. Although nonfiction, it reads like a political thriller. The book is not just the story of the murder plot. It includes many details of life in Renaissance Florence, including the political system, banking, and the arranging of marriages.
  • Stephanie Dooper
The library is more than a place to read, study, or research. As the Graduate Intern for the Library Student Engagement Program I have found that library to be a place that stimulates creativity, fosters self-efficacy, and even creates a bit of fun. To me, the library has become a place for growth, where engaged learning is not merely in a classroom, but also in the place that prepares students for the classroom. As the program assistant for the Library Student Engagement Ambassadors, I see this transformative learning firsthand, and even better, I experience it alongside the students I mentor.
Picture of Hongwei Xu's lecture
  • Dawn Lawson
Last year, the Lieberthal-Rogel Center for Chinese Studies (LRCCS) and the Asia Library began co-sponsorship of a new series of guest lectures and workshops under the title Deep Dive into Digital and Data Methods in Chinese Studies.