Literature in the Library

July 30, 2007

More news from Muse

Filed under: New Journal Subscriptions — engllrc @ 7:33 pm

Project Muse has recently added more new journals, including the Steinbeck Review and Studies in Eighteenth-Century Culture. You’ll need to enter your MacEwan id and password to access the content.

Both of these journals are new acquisitions for the MacEwan Library. If you’d like more information about Project Muse, or any of our resources, please contact Sonya Betz (497-5251).

July 13, 2007

Project Muse adds new titles

Filed under: New Journal Subscriptions — engllrc @ 5:02 pm

The Project Muse database is plugging along in its acquisitions. Two newly added titles include:
the James Joyce Quarterly, and the William Carlos Williams Review.

Project Gutenburg comes to Canada

Filed under: Internet Resources — engllrc @ 4:56 pm

Canada Day marked an important online event for librarians, bibliophiles, and humanities-computing types as Project Gutenburg Canada launched its site.

Project Gutenburg publishes the text of books in the public domain (in Canada, 50 years after the author’s death). The books are free to read and download, and many are items that are out of print and often difficult to find.

Visit Project Gutenburg Canada http://www.gutenberg.ca/
Visit Project Gutenburg http://www.gutenberg.org/

June 26, 2007

Database trials underway

Filed under: New Databases — engllrc @ 4:13 pm

Summer is a good time for us to explore and evaluate potential new resources. Two trials underway that you may be interested in looking at are the Historical New York Times and Orlando: Women’s Writing in the British Isles from the Beginnings to the Present

The Historical New York Times is being trialled for the History Department. It includes a full image archive of newspaper articles from The New York Times from 1851-2003.

I’ve set up the Orlando trial for the English Department. Orlando provides biographical and critical accounts of the lives and works of authors, together with contextual materials relevant to critical and historical readings.

June 20, 2007

Back from hiatus

Filed under: Library Business — engllrc @ 10:34 pm

My apologies for the lack of activity on Lit in the LRC. I’ve been off to conferences and on vacation for the past two months, but I’ve returned for the summer, so you can expect to see more action on the blog in the near future.

Some updates on the library:

1. We’ve officially become the “Library.” Perhaps not a particularly groundbreaking new name, but on we hope will cause less confusion among our users than the rather ambiguous “LRC.” I’ve changed the name of this blog to reflect the change.

2. Library renovations are in full swing, creating a bit of an interruption in our service. The stacks are closed, meaning you and your students will need to request library materials online using the catalogue, and then drop into the 3rd floor temporary service area to pick them up.

3. We are currently piloting term loans for faculty and staff. If you check out a book from our main collection, you’ll now get to hold on to it until the end of the term.

March 16, 2007

Epistolary Literature

Filed under: Internet Resources — engllrc @ 8:38 pm

The latest from the BBC’s In Our Time podcast is a session on epistolary literature:

From its first appearance in the 17th Century with writers like Aphra Behn, epistolary fiction, fiction in the form of letters, reached its heyday in the 18th Century . . . So why was letter writing so important to 18th Century authors? How did this style aid the development of the novel? And why did epistolary literature fall out of favour? . . . From the  In Our Time website


Contributers to this session include:

John Mullan, Professor of English at University College London
Karen O’Brien, Professor in English at the University of Warwick
Brean Hammond, Professor of Modern English Literature at the University of Nottingham

Listen by visiting the In Our Time website and downloading the podcast here: http://www.bbc.co.uk/radio4/history/inourtime/

In Our Time image

March 13, 2007

eBrary: Books from your desktop

Filed under: New Books,New Databases — engllrc @ 8:32 pm

We’ve recently subscribed to a large collection of online books: eBrary.

eBrary is an enourmous resource, and includes over 3200 online books in the “Language and Literature” category alone. To use the collection you’ll need to download the eBrary Reader from the eBrary home page. Books from eBrary will be included in the LRC’s catalogue in the near future. For now, you can search directly through the eBrary catalogue.
If you have any questions about this resource, please contact me!

ebrary

City Centre LRC Renovations

Filed under: Library Business — engllrc @ 8:20 pm

As you may be aware, the renovation and expansion of the CCC LRC is scheduled to occur in two phases: May to August 2007 and May to August 2008.

When completed, the CCC LRC will accommodate a significant expansion of the library collection and provide increased student seating, study, and computer work space. In addition, there will be improved access to service desks; separation of traffic flow from student use areas; a new library instruction lab; and wireless access throughout the facility.

To create an LRC that will meet the needs of MacEwan students and faculty will require concentrated periods of renovation and construction. We have been working with Facilities to develop a plan to provide services during the renovation period.

Attached is an overview of our proposed service operation from May to August 2007. Please share this information with faculty who are scheduled to teach at City Centre Campus in the spring or summer 2007 terms as access to the LRC will be limited during this period.

As soon as we know the exact construction schedule, we will finalize this plan and publicize it to the college community. Facilities will also post maps and signage throughout the campus showing the exact location of LRC service points.

See below for more detail  (more…)

March 8, 2007

Shakespeares after Shakespeare and other new ref titles

Filed under: New Books — engllrc @ 6:47 pm

I often find myself trying to convince students of the value of our reference collection as an important place to begin the research process. Checking out some of the new titles arriving this week in the LRC, I’m reminded myself of some of the treasures that this underused collection houses.

We’ve just received an excellent 2 volume encyclopedia called Shakespeares after Shakespeare: An Encyclopedia of the Bard in Mass Media and Popular Culture This set documents the huge assortment of adaptations and reinventions of Shakespeare’s work, from comic strips to film adaptations to pop songs. This set also contains some good overview essays introducing each major section. You can find Shakespeares on Shakespeare in the Reference collection at PR 2880.A1 S48 2007.

More LHCADL databases

Filed under: New Databases — engllrc @ 6:46 pm

The Lois Hole Campus Alberta Digital Library has finished its negotiations with Proquest (a vendor of several databases). I’m happy to announce that we’ve received 4 more new database subscriptions from Proquest, including Literature Online (LION). More info about this database can be found at http://il.proquest.com/products_pq/descriptions/literature_online.shtml, and I can forward on a title list of journals to anyone interested. You’ll soon be able to access LION through the alphabetical database list on the LRC’s website.

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