Destress with Dogs at Paley Library

Hunter

Hunter, a therapy dog

Starting this Thursday, we’ll have some furry friends in Paley Library to help you destress in the midst of final exams! This event is part of our Crunch Time Café, a series of events providing free food, activities, and a break from studying. Hang out with the therapy dogs in the Paley Library Lecture Hall during the following times:

Thursday, December 10, 1:00 PM – 3:00 PM
Friday, December 11, 1:00 PM – 3:00 PM
Monday, December 14, 1:00 PM – 3:00 PM
Tuesday, December 15, 1:00 PM – 3:00 PM

 

 

Don’t forget about our other Crunch Time Café events over the next two weeks!

crunch_title

Rise and Shine
Tuesday, December 8, 7:00 AM – 12:00 PM
Join us the first day of study days for breakfast treats and coffee to start your studying off right.

Crafts ‘n’ Games
Wednesday, December 9, 5:00 PM – 10:00 PM
Take a break from studying by unwinding with crafts and games the night before final exams begin.

The End is Near!
Tuesday, December 15, 7:00 PM – 12:00 AM
You are so close! Join us one last time for caffeine, treats, and healthful snacks to help you power through to the end of exams and propel you toward a much needed break.

Paley Library to Host Finals Week Activities

crunch_titleTemple University Libraries is here to help you relax and refuel during the stressful end of the semester rush. Join us at Paley Library for our Crunch Time Café, a series of events during study days and final exams that includes free food, activities, and therapy dogs. See the full schedule below!

Rise and Shine
Tuesday, December 8, 7:00 AM – 12:00 PM
Join us the first day of study days for breakfast treats and coffee to start your studying off right.

Crafts ‘n’ Games
Wednesday, December 9, 5:00 PM – 10:00 PM
Take a break from studying by unwinding with crafts and games the night before final exams begin.

Destress with Dogsdog_purple
Thursday, December 10, 1:00 PM – 3:00 PM
Friday, December 11, 1:00 PM – 3:00 PM
Monday, December 14, 1:00 PM – 3:00 PM
Tuesday, December 15, 1:00 PM – 3:00 PM
As exams are in full swing, can you imagine anything better than taking a break with cuddly, sweet therapy dogs? Neither can we! Stop by to hang out and destress with some furry friends.

The End is Near!
Tuesday, December 15, 7:00 PM – 12:00 AM
You are so close! Join us one last time for caffeine, treats, and healthful snacks to help you power through to the end of exams and propel you toward a much needed break.

All events will take place in the Paley Library Lecture Hall, 1210 Polett Walk, Ground Floor. Visit library.temple.edu/beyondthepage to learn more about programming at Temple University Libraries.

Games and Libraries

IGD_LOGO_AmericasLibraries around the world are celebrating International Games Day this Saturday, November 21. This free event, now in its eighth year, inspires community members to gather at their local libraries one Saturday in November to read, learn, and play. The annual celebration includes special gaming programs and events, and reminds us that libraries serve as gathering places for all members of the community, and provide space for engagement, inspirations, ideas, and fun!

Check out the map for local, participating libraries in your area:

 

As you know, Temple University Libraries are also invested in the community building, educational, and critical dimensions of games, gaming, and play. In fact, this year our Beyond the Page public programming series takes up those questions with our Games Without Frontiers curated, thematic events. The series has and will continue to explore gender and gaming, game design, the role of games in American leisure, and other important impacts of gaming culture. We are also using this frame as a metaphor for the ways in which chance, play, and algorithms appear in everyday life and guide our cultural systems. Stay on the lookout for updates about our spring programs and participate in a little gaming in the final days of fall semester. As we enter the end of semester rush, take a break at Paley Library’s Crunch Time Café for Craft n’ Games Night on Wednesday, November 9 between 5:00 PM and 10:00 PM in the Paley Library Lecture Hall.

 

Alumna Angela Washko to Speak and Perform at Temple University Libraries

courtesy Angela Washko

courtesy Angela Washko

Temple University Libraries is excited to welcome new media artist Angela Washko, a Tyler School of Art and Temple University Honors alumna, to campus November 5 and 6. Washko is currently a Visiting Assistant Professor at Carnegie Mellon University and has made a career of creating new forums for feminism in the spaces most hostile toward it. Her work has been featured in Time Magazine, VICE, Hyperallergic, and the New York Times, and she is also a recent recipient of The Franklin Furnace Performance Fund Grant, a Creative Time Report commission, a Rhizome Internet Art Microgrant, a Danish International Visiting Artist Grant and the Terminal Award. Her projects have been presented nationally and internationally at venues including Kiasma Museum of Contemporary Art (Helsinki, Finland), Los Angeles Museum of Contemporary Art, Moving Image Art Fair (London and NYC), and the Rotterdam International Film Festival.

Selected for this fall’s Artist/Makers Residency, Washko’s two-day engagement is part of Games Without Frontiers, the curated, thematic series on games, gaming, and play at the center of this year’s Temple University Libraries Beyond the Page public programming series.

Join us this Thursday, November 5 for Washko’s talk, “Going to the Source: Performance and Negotiation in Polarized Online Spaces,” and on Friday, November 6 for her performance, “Tightrope Routines (A Feminist Artist Interviews the Internet’s Most Infamous Misogynist),” a storytelling performance based on a year of exchanges between Washko and a pick-up artist, author, blogger and notorious manosphere leader. Both presentations will take place at 5:30 PM in the Paley Library Lecture Hall located at 1210 Polett Walk in the center of Temple Main Campus.

Read more about Angela Washko and Beyond the Page at library.temple.edu/beyondthepage

Good Morning, Beautiful Business: Balancing the Mind and the Heart

“Business is about relationships.” Says Judy Wicks, Founder of Philadelphia’s famous White Dog Cafe and pioneer of the local food movement. Fostering strong and empathetic relationships with employees, community, and the land are what Wicks credits as the foundation to her successful endeavors as both a business owner and a leader of national and local nonprofit organizations.

On October 16th, Wicks was the latest speaker in Temple University Library’s fall 2013 “Beyond the Page” public program series Gather Round the Table: Conversations on the History, Impact and Implications of Food in Our Society. In her presentation “Good Morning, Beautiful business” (named for the title of her recent memoir), Wicks shared her story of compassionate economics based in empathy and respect for world around her.

Wicks’ story begins in University City circa 1970, when her and her then-husband Dick Haynes founded The Free People Store, a retail establishment specializing in locally sourced merchandise and decorated using recycled goods to create a DIY/earth-friendly aesthetic. Though Wicks and Haynes would split only a year later (Haynes would go on to expand the Free People brand to create the Urban Outfitters retail empire), it took only a short time for her to become involved in the local restaurant scene, eventually opening The White Dog Café on the ground floor of her home in 1983.

Witnessing the negative effects that the practices of national chains were having on the local economy, Wicks set out to create a business that was their antitheses, working to create a business with deep and sustainable roots in Philadelphia and in her University City community. This manifested itself as a commitment to living wages, humanely sourced food, local beverage (The White Dog Café was a pioneer in Philadelphia’s now-famous craft beer scene), and community outreach. In the case of the latter, The White Dog Café regularly held open holiday celebrations, educational public presentations, and workshops organized in tandem with West Philadelphia High School to create an awareness of sustainable nutrition in the community.

Wicks’ civic focus eventually expanded to activism beyond the White Dog Café to a national level. In 2009 Wicks sold the Café to focus on several nonprofit organizations devoted to sustainable and local businesses: the national Business Alliance for Local Living Economies (BALLE), The Sustainable Business Network of Philadelphia, and Fair Food. The spirit of these organizations of these, Wicks says, is to help businesses to make decisions that are a marriage of the heart and the head, allowing them to profit while responsibly serving and interacting with the community.

“Good Morning, Beautiful Business” is a reminder that values need not be left at home. By fostering real and meaningful relationships in business, Wicks is an example of how this phrase can be taken beyond the page and used to create business that can strengthen our relationships with both each other and the world.

 

Libraries Participate in Archives Month Philly

Temple University Libraries are thrilled to participate in Archives Month Philly, a first-ever programming initiative organized by the Delaware Valley Archivists Group. This month-long festival, timed to coincide with American Archives Month, will kick off in Paley Library on Tuesday, October 1 at 3PM with Live from the Collections: In and Out of Poetry. The program features readings by poets Lyn Lifshin, Elaine Terranova, Daniel Scott Snelson and will be followed by a roundtable discussion moderated by Matthew Kalasky, director of the Nicola Midnight St. Claire, a critical voice in Philadelphia. The poets will read their own works, and works from the Libraries’ archives and discuss the process and performance of poetry.

Catch us again at the Lantern Slide Salon, taking place 6PM on October 1 at the Wagner Free Institute of Science. The salon highlights the historic lantern slide collections of some of the region’s most significant cultural and educational institutions, including Temple University Libraries. Other participants: The Athenaeum of PhiladelphiaIndependence Seaport MuseumMorris ArboretumSwarthmore College Peace CollectionTemple University Special Collections and Research Centerthe University of Pennsylvania Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology, and the Wagner Free Institute of Science.

Find out more about the initiative and programs at archivesmonthphilly.com

What is it about Walt…..

What is it about Walt Whitman that keeps us wondering? His intrigue goes so far beyond those iconic poems, like Leaves of Grass, that great work of American literature and innovation. He is a, poet, iconoclast, voice of democracy, voice of dissent, queer writer, and American celebrity.

On Thursday we’ll mark National Library Week and National Poetry month by pondering Whitman’s long-reaching legacy with David Haven Blake and Michael Robertson, two professors of English at the College of New Jersey. Katherine Henry, professor of English here at Temple, will ask questions and guide the conversation.

Both Haven Blake and Robertson consider not just Whitman’s poetry, but his cultural legacy, as well. The scholars are co-editors of Walt Whitman, Where the Future Becomes Present (University of Iowa Press, 2008). The book invigorates Whitman studies by garnering insights from a diverse group of writers and intellectuals. Writing from the perspectives of art history, political theory, creative writing, and literary criticism, the contributors place Whitman in the center of both world literature and American public life.

Blake is also the author of Walt Whitman and the Culture of American Celebrity (Yale University Press, 2006). Robertson is the recipient of two National Endowment for the Humanities Fellowships and author of Worshipping Walt: The Whitman Disciples (Princeton UP, 2008).

Join us for the conversation

Thursday, April 18, 3:30 pm, Paley Library Lecture Hall

 

WhitmanDisciples Whitman and the Culture of American Celebrity

Andrew Smith, historian of all things food and drink, to speak at Paley Library March 26

Andrew SmithAndrew Smith is one of the foremost experts and most prolific authors on the history of American food and beverage. On Tuesday, March 26 at 3:30 PM, he will be speaking at Paley library on one of his latest publications, Drinking History: 15 Turning Points in the Making of American Beverages (Columbia University Press).

Smith has penned books on hamburgers, potatoes, junk food, fast food, turkey, ketchup and more. He is the author of the comprehensive  Eating History: Thirty Turning Points in the Making of American Cuisine (Columbia University Press, 2008) and the Oxford Companion to American Food and Drink (Oxford University Press, 2007).

He was recently interviewed by CBS news about movie popcorn. Check out the story and then join us Tuesday to get the lowdown on American food and drink!

CHAT Series on the Digital Humanities Continues Thursday, March 7

On Thursday, March 7 the Center for the Humanities at Temple’s series on Digital Humanities, co-sponsored by Temple University Libraries, will continue at the CHAT lounge in Gladfelter Hall. Kathleen Fitzpatrick, professor of Media Studies at Pomona College and Director of Scholarly Communications at the MLA will discuss “The Humanities in and for the Digital Age.” Dr. Fitzpatrick will address how digital technologies have rapidly changed the landscape of scholarly publishing, and how they have equally changed the ways that scholars themselves engage with their work. This talk explores a few of those changes as they have begun to affect the humanities, including the new roles being played by scholarly societies in today’s communication environment.

Interested in urban planning, sustainability, real and imagined spaces? Join us 2/21 as scholar Miles Orvell and photographer Sandy Sorlien talk Main Streets

What is an American Main Street? Is it a memory or image that has been perpetuated through American writing and art? A real space within new urbanist town planning? Or is it a place where some are welcome and others are shunned? Perhaps it is all of the above.

Distinguished Temple professor Miles Orvell and photographer Sandy Sorlien will take on these questions, and more, at an interdisciplinary conversation on American Main Streets at Paley Lecture Hall on 2/21, 2:30 PM.

When asked about the importance of main streets to planning and sustainability, Sorlien, who has been advocating for walkable downtowns for the past decade, stated “the importance of the traditional Main Street is that it is the essential center of a walkable
village or urban neighborhood. You can’t have walkability without  useful destinations  (shops, offices, civic functions), and without  walkability the place depends on cars, which further damage walkability, at least the way we’ve designed cities for many decades.” She also adds that “It’s important to understand Main Streets as essential to great  cities, not just quaint little rural towns.  Philadelphia’s mixed-use  corridors knit our many neighborhoods together, which then enables  transit. It’s all connected.”

Her photographic practice reflects her interest in these spaces, and she has been photographing landscapes and townscapes since 1980. She has published her work in Fifty Houses: Images from the American Road (Johns Hopkins 2002), and is finishing a book about Main Streets in America with the working title The Heart of Town.

Dr. Miles Orvell, professor of English and American Studies here at Temple, is equally interested in main streets, and his innovative, interdisciplinary research approaches questions of space and the built environment through a number of theoretical, visual, and historiographic methods.

In the last five years, Orvell has focused his research on the cultural meaning of
place, and he has co-edited a collection of essays,Public Space and the Ideology of Place in American Culture (Rodopi, 2009). He is an editor of the University of Pennsylvania Press series, Architecture, Technology, Culture, and is co-editing
a volume in the series, Thinking Architecture, Technology, Culture, based on a
conference he helped organize in Munich.

His most recent book is The Death and Life of Main Street: Small Towns in American
Memory, Space, and Community
 (University of North Carolina Press, 2012), which
recovers the complex and contradictory cultural meanings of the small town at the
same time that it problematizes the icon of Main Street. He is presently working
on a book on photography, ruins, and contemporary culture, called “The Course of
Empire: American Photography and the Destructive Sublime.”

Join us to examine these real and imagined notions of American main streets with Miles Orvell and Sandy Sorlien. We hope to see you at Paley Library Lecture Hall on Thursday, February 21 at 2:30 PM to join in the conversation!