Library Blogs

Showing 61 - 70 of 1964 items
Four Michigan students standing next to a yellow block 'M', two on each side.
  • Paige J Lemmon
On Monday, August 26th, the first day of fall classes, the University of Michigan campus buzzed with excitement.
A headshot photo of Yixin Zhang
  • Yixin Zhang
"Where do I belong?" This question lingered in my mind long after my conversations with Sisi, a 21-year-old Chinese-Spanish student at Universitat Pompeu Fabra (UPF).
A headshot photo of Manvinder Gill.
  • Manvinder Kaur Gill
My research addresses barriers to accessing treatment for opioid use disorder (OUD) among women in Punjab, India.
Sepia-toned map of Italy and Croatia
  • Lynne Raughley
A recent gift to the library brought a collection of remarkable maps, along with the remarkable story of the man who collected them.

Back in 1964, Dr. Stevo Julius (1929-2025) left his home in Zagreb, Yugoslavia, emigrating to the United States to take up a position in the University of Michigan health system. Upon his death 60 years later, he left behind a substantial legacy. Among the highlights: research breakthroughs on hypertension and metabolic syndrome that helped establish the university as a global leader in cardiovascular research; a research professorship in his name to honor these achievements; a thriving family and a scientific community nurtured over many decades by Julius and his wife, Susan; and a personal history of fighting fascism in his youth as a Jewish member of the Partisan movement during World War II.
Cover of The Song of Achilles by Madeline Miller
  • Vicki J Kondelik
The Song of Achilles is Madeline Miller's beautifully written retelling of the Trojan War through the eyes of Patroclus, Achilles' companion and, in this version of the story, lover. Miller writes about the two boys' childhood, their early training by a centaur, and the events that brought them to Troy. She also has much to say about how war changes people. It is a wonderful novel, and will stay in your mind for a long time.
Poster at National Chengchi University recruiting xueban (學伴; study buddies) for short-term Mainland exchange students, semester 114.1 in the ROC calendar. Taiwanese study buddies are often the first local friends Mainland students make; some are also roommates.
  • Qihao Liang
My name is Qihao Liang, and I’m a rising senior in Sociology in the Honors Program. I am deeply grateful for the U-M Library Student Mini Grant, which supported my May 8 to 23, 2025 fieldwork in Taiwan for my honors thesis on investment and education migration between Mainland China and Taiwan since 2008. I also want to thank Dr. Liangyu Fu, Director of the Asia Library, whose research guidance, fieldwork planning, and safety check-ins made this work possible. Writing in mid-August, I see how being on the ground in Taiwan reshaped my project; embodiment became tangible (what Ruth Behar calls “the vulnerable observer”), bringing emotional resonance and my own researcher subjectivity into view. Stepping onto the island as a citizen of the People’s Republic of China (PRC) with relatives separated across the Strait, I learned that self-exposure, the experience of being scrutinized and scrutinizing, and the slow time of fieldwork with participants—walking, eating, talking, getting lost—led me and, I hope, my readers to places that Zoom calls, archives, and scraping Instagram, Xiaohongshu, or Threads cannot reach.
A collection of historical models made by Anna Embre.
  • Pablo Alvarez
We are delighted to announce the upcoming opening of a new exhibit highlighting a selection of rare books from the University of Michigan's collections, each of which illustrates binding topics featured in "Suave Mechanicals," the acclaimed nine-volume series dedicated to the study of the art and history of bookbinding.
The preview version of the King James Bible text collection featuring U-M branding and modern interface.
  • Robyn Ness
The University of Michigan Library’s Bible: King James Version (KJV) digital collection is one of our oldest and most-visited text collections. At nearly 30 years old, the collection’s design reflects the early days of the Web. With effort underway to update the functional underpinnings of our digital collections, it was time to return to the KJV to study how well the text would work within our updated site layout, which is now used across the majority of our text collections.
Asia Library poster
  • Liangyu Fu
We invite you to look back with us at some of the Asia Library’s most meaningful moments from the past academic year.
Shapiro Design Lab Pano Photo
  • Erica Ervin
Apply now to join the Shapiro Design Lab Team