Spring 2008

Volume 21, No. 2/3

Spring 2008 cover image

The Color Purple

A New Story for a Familiar Reader

Purple flower

From Personal to Political

Human Rights Histories in Duke's Special Collections Library

Family photos

Duke Yearlook

A Virtual Photo Album of Duke Favorites

Duke postcard

Don't Shoot the Messenger

Encouraging Intellectual Inquiry and Upholding the Law

Scholarly communications

Then and Now

Eight South African Photographers exhibit their photos at Duke

South Africa photos

China: Trade, Politics and Culture 1793-1980

Collections Highlight

Chinese stamps

Arts and Music

Internet Sites Selected for the Readers of Duke University Libraries

Antique glass

Technology Showcase for Kids

Duke Libraries and the PepsiCo K-12 Technology Mentor Program

Kids at Lakewood School

Spring 2008 issue

Notes
Knowledge Bytes
Arts and music
Don't Shoot the Messenger
or how a Scholarly Communications Officer Encourages Intellectual Inquiry and Upholds the Law
From Personal to Political
Human Rights Histories
Collections Highlight
China: Trade, Politics and Culture
Writer's Page
The Color Purple: A New Story for a Familiar Reader

Spring 2008

Don't Shoot the MessengerDon’t Shoot the Messenger

When I first accepted this position, several friends teased me about the title and asked if a scholarly communications officer carried a badge. Good-natured ribbing aside, one of the images I struggle against is that of “copyright cop.” Although my first responsibility is to advise faculty, staff, and students about the application of copyright law to their varied and changing activities, I try to do that without always saying “no.”

From Personal to PoliticalFrom Personal to Political

My mother recently sent me a letter which she had come across while cleaning out an over-burdened closet. After reading it and digesting its contents, she knew it would pique the interest of her son, an archivist now curating a human rights collection at Duke University. I mention this letter from my family’s own archives to illustrate from a personal perspective the important and perhaps unexpected nature of human rights documentation that is being collected by the Archive for Human Rights at the Duke Libraries.

China: Trade, Politics and CultureChina: Trade, Politics and Culture

From England’s first diplomatic mission to China in the late 18th century to the rise of the People’s Republic in the twentieth century, European and American government representatives, missionaries, business people and tourists living and working in China documented their activities and observations, creating an invaluable record of China’s evolution over two centuries into a modern power.

The Color Purple: A New Story for a Familiar ReaderThe Color Purple: A New Story for a Familiar Reader

As an adolescent, I understood The Color Purple to be a story about pain and, ultimately, triumph. But as an adult who has gone through her own process of healing and who is nearing mid-life (God willing), this becomes a new story.

Notes

Notes

A Virtual Photo Album of Duke Favorites

Exhibits

Events

Technology Showcase for Kids

Libraries’ John Hope Franklin Collection Acquires Darlene Clark Hine Papers

Faschingsfest

Latin Chic at the Library

$1,000 Reward for Excellence

Arts and MusicArts and Music

Knowledge Bytes - Internet Sites Selected for the Readers of Duke University Libraries


Printable PDF version

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