Posts by Juli McLoone

Showing 91 - 96 of 96
Photograph of Anne Waldman
  • Juli McLoone
In culmination of this year’s Poetry at Literati series, Anne Waldman, whose papers are part of the U-M Special Collections Library, will be performing tonight with fellow poet Anne Carson at 7:30pm at Ann Arbor’s Literati Bookstore (124 E. Washington). Anne Waldman is renowned for her dynamic poetry performances, which are intended "to conjure states of mind and possibilities, and to wake people up to poetry as an active condition. As an experience in and of itself."
Lynx Plate from Audubon's Viviparous Quadrupeds
  • Juli McLoone
With thanks to the Digital Library Production Service (DLPS), we are happy to announce the launch of a new online collection. John James Audubon's The Birds of America was the founding purchase of the University Library in 1839 and as U-M celebrates its bicentennial, the Special Collections Library and the William L. Clements' Library have jointly purchased Audubon’s The Viviparous Quadrupeds of North America. All of Audubon’s mammals and a selection of the birds are now available online.
March Winds nursery rhyme illustrated by anthropomorphic flowers
  • Juli McLoone
Spring has sprung and it's time to celebrate the season of new growth with poetry!
Photograph: Portrait of Eleanor Burke Leacock sitting at a desk, with a book case visible behind her.
  • Juli McLoone
"Utterly stunned, I walked down Broadway with a frie[n]d, repeating over and over to him, “Do you realize there are some things I will not be able to do simply because I am a woman? Do you realize…” I could not stop recounting the incident." In these words, anthropologist Eleanor Leacock recalls the moment in 1943 when she was denied an Assistantship solely because of her gender and she realized the full extent of discrimination that she would face as a female academic.
Opening page of the text of The Red Shoes by Hans Christian Andersen. 1928 Fine Press Edition with chapter heading of red shoes and leaves.
  • Juli McLoone
Hans Christian Andersen's “The Red Shoes” tells the story of an orphan girl whose uncontrolled desire for material pleasures and social status leads to her downfall.
Close-up photograph of someone typing on typewriter
  • Juli McLoone
Feeling nostalgic for print-forms gone by? Or eagerly seeking the next production medium for your postmodern creativity? Either way, come join the Harlequin Creature typing bee in the gallery of Hatcher Graduate Library on Wednesday, February 18th from 11:30am-4:30pm.