Friday, February 19, 2021

New Items at Hewes Library

New items are added to the Hewes Library collection on a continual basis. Recent titles have included:


  • W.E.B. DuBois: The Lost and the Found by Elvira Basevich
  • The Political Influences of Churches by Paul A. Djupe & Christopher Gilbert
  • Ethics in the Digital Domain by Robert S. Fortner
  • Ink by James Graham
  • Harvest of Empire: A History of Latinos in America by Juan Gonzalez
  • Endurance Sport and the American Philosophical Tradition edited by Douglas Hochstetler
  • Watercolor: A History by Marie-Pierre Sale
  • Health Care and Human Dignity by Frank M. McClellan
  • Japan's Imperial House in the Post War Era 1945-2019 by Kenneth J. Rouoft
  • 100 Posters That Changed the World by Colin Salter

Wednesday, February 17, 2021

Comics Lecture 2/23 7PM

 Hewes Library is pleased to share with faculty, staff and students:

Join Communication Studies instructor and comics enthusiast, Chris Goble, for a presentation “Examining Comics: Truth, Justice and the American Way” on Tuesday, February 23rd 7:00pm.

Goble will discuss how comics have created scenarios beyond epic supervillain battles, and have utilized characters like Superman and Black Panther in the fight against bigotry and injustice.

This lecture accompanies an exhibit in Hewes Library of items from Goble’s own collection, including original issues of Wonder Woman and Black Panther.

The lecture will be hosted on Zoom and is free and open to the public.

 Time: Feb 23, 2021 07:00 PM

Join Zoom Meeting

https://monmouthcollege.zoom.us/j/98069561934?pwd=Vjc2VzU0dGVJVzc3WTFmYmlaYnZFdz09

Meeting ID: 980 6956 1934

Passcode: 255200

 

One tap mobile

+13126266799,,98069561934#,,,,*255200# US (Chicago)

 

Pow! Bam! Shazam! Add it to YOUR calendar from the campus calendar:  https://www.monmouthcollege.edu/calendar/event/7656-examining-comics-truth-justice-and-the-american



Monday, February 15, 2021

Streaming Films - Black History Month

Honor Black History Month with streaming films available through the library database Academic Video Online (AVON). This platform includes documentaries, interviews, performances, news, and award-winning films, available both on and off campus.


Highlights

John Lewis: Good Trouble The story of legendary U.S. Representative John Lewis’ life, legacy, and more than 60 years of extraordinary activism.



This Little Light of Mine: The Legacy of Fannie Lou Hamer  In Ruleville, Mississippi in 1961, summers were scorching, cotton was still king, and African Americans were shackled to white intimidation, poverty and cruel injustice. Fannie Lou Hamer, a middle aged sharecropper living on a sprawling plantation, had known no other way. But that all changed when anger, fate and an invitation to a voting registration meeting redirected the course of her destiny.

 


The African Americans: Many Rivers to Cross?

This 6 part PBS series begins with The Black Atlantic: 1500-1800

  • The Black Atlantic' explores the global experiences that created the African-American people. Beginning a century before the first documented '20-and-odd' slaves who arrived at Jamestown, Virginia, the episode portrays the earliest Africans, slave and free, who arrived on these shores. The transatlantic slave trade soon became a vast empire connecting three continents. Through stories of individuals caught in its web, the episode traces the emergence of plantation slavery in the American South and examines what the late 18th-century era of revolutions - American, French and Haitian - would mean for African Americans and slavery in America.

The series ends with A More Perfect Union: 1968-2013

  • After 1968, African Americans set out to build a bright future on the foundation of the civil rights movement's victories, but a growing class disparity threatened to split the black community. As African Americans won political office across the country and the black middle class made progress, larger economic and political forces isolated the black urban poor. When Barack Obama was elected president in 2008, many hoped that America had finally transcended racism. By the time of his second victory, however, it was clear that many issues, including true racial equality, remain to be resolved. How will African Americans help redefine the United States in the years to come?

 Browse the films in this database

Thursday, February 11, 2021

Examining Comics Display

Pow! Bam! Shazam!

A comics display is available for super-heroes (and the rest of us) to view in the east entrance exhibit cases in Hewes Library.   

"Examining Comics: Truth, Justice and the American Way" showcases comic books, action figures and even an autographed photo of Adam West, all courtesy of the collection of Communication Studies instructor, Chris Goble. 

The exhibition highlights the transformation of comics through out the decades, in particular the social aspects reflected, and challenged, in this literary and artistic medium.

Join us for a lecture to accompany the display by Chris Goble on Tuesday, February 23rd 7:00pm. 

Goble will discuss how comics have created scenarios beyond epic supervillain battles, and have utilized characters like Superman and Black Panther in the fight against bigotry and injustice.  

The lecture will be hosted on Zoom and is free and open to the public.



 

Student Art Show Open

The Juried Student Art Exhibition is now open! 25 artists entered a total of 57 artworks. 39 pieces from 19 artists were accepted into the show. The show is on view at the Len G. Everett Gallery in Hewes Library through March 1st. See gallery hours below.

Sunday  1pm – 4pm
Monday   noon – 4pm
Tuesday   9am - noon
Wednesday  4pm – 8pm 
Thursday  noon – 4pm
Friday   Gallery CLOSED
Saturday  Library CLOSED

In addition to the variety of awards selected by the juror, the Buchanan Center for the Arts is sponsoring a People’s Choice Award. Voting takes place through a Facebook Event page. Just “Like” your favorite artwork; or post your own photo from the show.  Awards will be announced at the end of February.