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With support from Brown, Providence schools transform learning in high school libraries 12/29/2024

Through a grant from the Fund for the Education of the Children of Providence, the Library has invested in PPSD libraries. Brown Deputy Librarian Nora Dimmock: "by investing in school libraries, the goal is to strengthen reading and writing proficiency, enhance critical thinking, and expand digital literacy and research skills among Providence students."

With support from Brown, Providence schools transform learning in high school libraries Support from the Fund for the Education of the Children of Providence has reinvigorated PPSD high school libraries with expanded collections, updated spaces, and new learning opportunities for students and teachers.

Photos from Brown University Library's post 11/26/2024

Brown students: Enjoy free pizza while preparing for finals!

> Monday, December 9 at ORWIG Music Library @ 8 p.m.
> Tuesday, December 10 at the ROCK @ 9 p.m.
> Wednesday, December 11 at the SCILI (Friedman Study Center) @ 9 p.m.

Pizza nights are brought to you by the Library and .

Best of luck with finals!

This is your Library. You belong here.

library.brown.edu/create/libnews/pizza-nights-fall-2024/

Harjo in Providence: A curated archive of the works of Indigenous poet Joy Harjo finds a home at Brown University - Motif 11/06/2024

Heather Cole, Head of Special Collections Instruction and Curator of Literary & Popular Culture Collections at the John Hay Library, speaks with Motif magazine about Joy Harjo's papers.

Harjo in Providence: A curated archive of the works of Indigenous poet Joy Harjo finds a home at Brown University - Motif EvErybody has a heartache —  This silence in the noise of the terminal is a mountain of bison skulls. Nobody knows, nobody sees —  Unless the indigenous are dancing powwow all decked out in flash and beauty We just don’t exist. We’ve been dispersed to an outlaw cowboy tale.

10/07/2024

Brown University Digital Publications has launched the multimodal edition of "Mortevivum: Photography and the Politics of the Visual" (https://on-seeing-mortevivum.org/), the inaugural title in the "On Seeing" series published by the MIT Press. Authored by Kimberly Juanita Brown, inaugural director of the Institute for Black Intellectual and Cultural Life at Dartmouth College, "Mortevivum" is a powerful examination of the unsettling history of photography and its fraught relationship to global antiblackness.

With subject matter that may be triggering, particularly images of violence and harm done to Black bodies, the open access multimodal edition employs a Consentful Tech framework, or the intentional development and use of technology to create safety, to prioritize care, and to foreground consent in order to mitigate trauma.

The multimodal edition also offers readers a Community Engagement Toolkit, a guide to having open conversations about antiblackness, visual culture, and death. Other uniquely digital content includes video recordings of author Kimberly Juanita Brown in dialogue with Brown University professors Kim Gallon, Juliet Ho**er, Kevin Quashie, and Avery Willis Hoffman; and with Vievee Elaure Francis of Dartmouth College.

Publications in the On Seeing series foreground the political agency, critical insight, and social impact inscribed in visuality and representation. The MIT Press will publish each On Seeing volume as a print book, ebook, and open access multimodal edition created by Brown University Digital Publications. The next title in the series is Black Elegies: Meditations on the Art of Mourning.

More information at library.brown.edu/create/libnews/multimodal-mortevivum/

09/19/2024

The Brown University Library, the Sarah Doyle Center, Pembroke Center, and the LGBTQ Center are thrilled to welcome Bishakh Som to campus on September 26th for a lecture on Trans/Migrations: Journeys Through Art, Architecture, Comics, and Gender.

Through charting her history of cultural and geographical displacements, Bishakh Som will propose that such continuous movements have been integral to reckoning with herself not only as part of a South Asian diaspora but also as a transgender femme. She will trace how ideas of travel, migration, language, and longing for a sense of home/belonging have been crucial to her art-making as it has itself migrated from its roots in comics, through architecture and painting to now roosting firmly back in comics, a medium which has allowed her to integrate these previous endeavors into one practice.

To learn more visit: https://events.brown.edu/sdwc/event/291127-transmigrations-journeys-through-art-archit

With focus on supporting HBCU faculty, Brown library expands access to scholarly digital publishing 07/31/2024

Fifteen humanities scholars from across the nation gathered in Brown University’s John D. Rockefeller Jr. Library this week with a shared mission: Explore best practices for authoring and publishing a first-rate, digital-first monograph and leave with the skills to create their own.

With focus on supporting HBCU faculty, Brown library expands access to scholarly digital publishing The Born-Digital Scholarly Publishing institute introduces scholars, many of whom are from historically Black and other minority-serving institutions, to best practices in online scholarly publishing.

Brown University Library to host free summer reading events for local kids and families 06/18/2024

In partnership with the Providence Public Library, the Brown Library is hosting a series of free activities this summer including story time with Bruno the Bear and visits from Elvy, Brown's comfort dog.

Brown University Library to host free summer reading events for local kids and families In partnership with Providence’s libraries, the Brown series aims to create fun, educational summer experiences for kids, welcoming all ages for storytimes, hands-on STEM activities, tours and more.

06/04/2024

Happy Pride! Your Brown University Library is highlighting “Archives of Sexuality and Gender: International Perspectives on LGBTQ Activism and Culture” as its Electronic Resource of the Month.

“Archives of Sexuality and Gender: International Perspectives on LGBTQ Activism and Culture” examines diversity in underrepresented areas of the world such as southern Africa and Australia, highlighting cultural and social histories, struggles for rights and freedoms, explorations of sexuality, and organizations and key figures in LGBTQ history. It ensures LGBTQ stories and experiences are preserved. Among many diverse and historical 20th century collections, materials include:

- The Papers of Simon Nkoli, a prominent South African anti-apartheid, gay and le***an rights, and HIV/AIDS activist

- Exit newspaper (formerly Link/Skakel), South Africa’s longest running monthly LGBTQ publication

- Geographic Files, also known as “Lesbians in…” with coverage from Albania to Zimbabwe

- The largest available collection of digitized Australian LGBTQ periodicals

The Library Expert whose specialties intersect with this archive is Leo Lovemore, Librarian for History, Society, and Culture. You can reach out to them directly at [email protected] for virtual or in-person consultations, classes, and meetings.

04/16/2024

April is Jazz Appreciation Month! The Brown University Library is highlighting Qwest TV for education, a video resource that includes a wide range of music content with particular strengths in rare jazz performances and jazz festival documentaries.

Created by Quincy Jones and curated by his team, Qwest maintains an archive of more than 1,300 videos; Qwest also commissions new performances and interviews with some of the most intriguing performers of the music world. Enjoy watching and listening to a wide range of musicians from Miles Davis and Pharoah Sanders to Moondog and Dafné Kritharas.

Please note that for full Qwest.TV/edu functionality, you will need to enable pop-ups in your browser and sign in using your Brown credentials. You may also need to clear your cache.

The library expert whose specialties intersect with this database is Laura Stokes ([email protected]), Performing Arts Librarian. You can reach out to her directly for virtual or in-person consultations, classes, and meetings.

This is your Library. You belong here.

Simmons Center exhibition examines art and incarceration, through Mumia Abu-Jamal works 04/01/2024

On view at Brown’s Ruth J. Simmons Center for the Study of Slavery and Justice through July, "Art and the Freedom Struggle: The Works of Mumia Abu-Jamal" serves as a creative companion to the biographical “Mumia Abu-Jamal: A Portrait of Mass Incarceration” exhibit currently on display at Brown’s John Hay Library.

Simmons Center exhibition examines art and incarceration, through Mumia Abu-Jamal works “Art and the Freedom Struggle: The Works of Mumia Abu-Jamal,” on view at Brown’s Ruth J. Simmons Center for the Study of Slavery and Justice, underscores the impact of creation during incarceration.

Simmons Center exhibition examines art and incarceration, through Mumia Abu-Jamal works 03/22/2024

On view at Brown’s Ruth J. Simmons Center for the Study of Slavery and Justice through July, the exhibit "Art and the Freedom Struggle: The Works of Mumia Abu-Jamal" serves as a creative companion to the biographical “Mumia Abu-Jamal: A Portrait of Mass Incarceration” exhibit currently on display at Brown’s John Hay Library.

Simmons Center exhibition examines art and incarceration, through Mumia Abu-Jamal works “Art and the Freedom Struggle: The Works of Mumia Abu-Jamal,” on view at Brown’s Ruth J. Simmons Center for the Study of Slavery and Justice, underscores the impact of creation during incarceration.

03/20/2024

Join Brown University Library as we host a cross-disciplinary panel discussion centered on Kimberly Juanita Brown’s Mortevivum: Photography and the Politics of the Visual (Paperback from MIT Press, February 2024. Open access digital edition by Brown University Digital Publications; full digital release June 2024).

Full details: https://library.brown.edu/create/libnews/mortevivum/

Speakers include the author, Kimberly Juanita Brown, Associate Professor, Department of English and Creative Writing and Director of the Institute for Black Intellectual and Cultural Life at Dartmouth College; Kim Gallon, Brown University Associate Professor of Africana Studies; Juliet Ho**er, Royce Family Professor of Teaching Excellence in Political Science; Kevin Quashie, Brown University Royce Family Professor of Teaching Excellence in English; and Avery Willis Hoffman, Artistic Director of the Brown Arts Institute and Professor of the Practice of Arts and Classics.

Date: Wednesday, April 3, 2024
Location: Willis Reading Room at the John Hay Library, 20 Prospect St, Providence & on Zoom (link shared on website closer to event date)

Program:

5 – 5:25 p.m.: Book sale and author signing
5:30 p.m.: Welcome remarks
5:45 p.m.: Reading by author Kimberly Juanita Brown
6 p.m.: Panel conversation
6:45 p.m.: Audience Q&A
7 p.m.: Reception
Free and open to the public.

Sponsored by Brown University Library, Africana Studies, Brown Arts Institute, Center for the Study of Race and Ethnicity, Center for the Study of Slavery and Justice, Cogut Institute for the Humanities, Comparative Literature, History of Art and Architecture, Modern Culture and Media, and Watson Institute for International and Public Affairs.

On Seeing
Mortevivum is the inaugural title of On Seeing, a new multimodal book series published by The MIT Press and Brown University Digital Publications. Devoted to visual literacy, publications foreground the political agency, critical insight, and social impact inscribed in visuality and representation. Centering underrepresented perspectives and understudied questions, books in the series articulate complex ideas about how we see, comprehend, and participate in the visual world.

Mortevivum
Mortevivum is a powerful examination of the unsettling history of photography and its fraught relationship to global antiblackness. Since photography’s invention, black life has been presented as fraught, short, agonizingly filled with violence, and indifferent to intervention: living death—mortevivum—in a series of still frames that refuse a complex humanity. In Mortevivum, Kimberly Juanita Brown shows us how the visual logic of documentary photography and the cultural legacy of empire have come together to produce the understanding that blackness and suffering—and death—are inextricable. Brown traces this idea from the earliest images of the enslaved to the latest newspaper photographs of black bodies, from the United States and South Africa to Haiti and Rwanda, documenting the enduring, pernicious connection between photography and a global history of antiblackness.

03/18/2024

Brown undergrads: Did you work on a project, paper or art work that you are particularly proud of? Consider submitting it to the 2024 Undergraduate Prize for Excellence in Library Research. Don’t miss a great chance to be recognized for your course work, and win a $750 prize.

Apply now through April 5!

Student research projects that were submitted for a class during the 2023 calendar year and made exemplary use of library resources are eligible. Library resources used for research can include anything from books to online databases to datasets to rare materials at the John Hay Library or John Carter Brown Library.

Eligible projects can be research papers, digital projects, artwork, and/or group projects. Please note that senior theses are not eligible.

Applications should include the project itself, a statement on your research process (500 - 750 words), a list of sources used, and a letter of support from the faculty member who taught your class. More information and the application form are at https://library.brown.edu/ugresearchprize

03/15/2024

HIRING : Director of Library Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion. DEI & associated issues of racial justice continue to be major commitments and are integral to the Library’s mission on campus & our growth as an organization.

https://www.linkedin.com/jobs/view/3854002428/

Photos from Brown University Library's post 02/21/2024

Did you know that you can mine and analyze large amounts of text using resources offered by the Library? This month, Brown University Library is highlighting ProQuest TDM Studio and Scopus API as its Electronic Resources of the Month.

ProQuest TDM Studio is a platform that allows you to text and data mine (in other words, gather and analyze large amounts of text) from news and scholarly and other kinds of publications that Brown subscribes to via ProQuest. You can visualize and analyze your data with no coding required using TDM Studio Visualizations, or use the Workbench to process, analyze, and export your data using Python or R.

Subscribing to Scopus, a database with over 1.8 billion cited references, is among the Brown Library's targeted contributions to the University's Operational Plan for Growing the Research Enterprise. The references in Scopus are derived mainly from articles and journals dating back to 1970 in social sciences, STEM, and health sciences. As part of this subscription, Brown community members have access to Scopus APIs, plus free access to citation data, citation counts, metadata, and abstracts from scholarly journals as well as full-text downloads in XML. XML files can be text mined for non-commercial research purposes via Scopus’ Full Text API.

The Library experts whose subject specialties intersect with this resource are Cass Wilkinson Saldaña, Tarika Sankar, Andrew Creamer, and Ashley Champagne. You can reach out to [email protected] for one-on-one virtual or in-person consultations, classes, and data requests.

02/06/2024

It's PUB DAY for “Mortevivum: Photography and the Politics of the Visual,” a powerful examination of the unsettling history of photography and its fraught relationship to global antiblackness, written by Kimberly Juanita Brown, the inaugural director of the Institute for Black Intellectual and Cultural Life at Dartmouth College. “Mortevivum” is the first in The MIT Press and Brown University Digital Publications’s (Brown University Library) On Seeing series, which is committed to centering underrepresented perspectives in visual culture. The OPEN ACCESS DIGITAL EDITION includes a video of author Kimberly Juanita Brown in conversation with poet Vievee Elaure Francis and a Community Engagement Toolkit, a guide to having open conversations about antiblackness, visual culture, and death. Visit on-seeing-mortevivum.org Association of University Presses

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