April 2009


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This Thursday, April 30th @ 7pm in Thacher Gallery the library will host a reading given by USF faculty poets David Holler, D.A. Powell, Dean Rader, Darrell Schramm, and Brian Teare. Don’t miss it!

Our National Poetry Month display will be up until this Friday, May 1st, so do please come by and browse the selection of poetry-related rarebook materials and USF faculty work we’ve collected.

This year’s display made the Zyzzvaspeaks blog. Our choice of words sparked concern? Now that’s the poetry spirit!  As a friend of ours suggested, we’ll consider it an “Onward!”

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It took 1 year before I ever said anything.

I never actually said yes.

You took a lot away from me, but I’m still here & you can’t hurt me any more.

This week the Office of Residence Life and Students Taking Action Against Sexual Violence are shining a spotlight on sexual assault in a series of events including installations around campus of The Clothesline Project. USF community members have decorated these and many more shirts as testimony to the problem of violence against women. Some are hanging in the library, first floor north behind the Thacher Gallery.

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svaw-erin-looks2 We pulled books and videos/DVDs from the shelves that you can check out, and compiled them in a list that you can take. You can also pick up a resource packet, with information, legal definitions, and advice on what to do if you or someone you know is attacked.svaw-when-i-was-153

More of the Clothesline Project and resource packets can be found in the residence halls and around the campus.

Please take some time to learn about the problem and how to help people who have experienced sexual violence.


This afternoon we finally held the drawing for the two iPod Shuffles promised to those who participated in our noise in the library focus groups.

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Professor Victoria Siu (left) pulled the names out of the box I held (center), while librarian Vicki Rosen (right) confirmed the two winners.

Congratulations William Jacobson and Jeremy Shorenstein, the two winners!

Also, many thanks to our moderators, Mary Wardell, Susan Prion, Golden Venters, Christina Sanchez, and Florentina Dobrin, as well as many thanks to the students and library users who participated. Ya’ll provided helpful insight to the issue of noise in the library, and we hope to make some changes to the library from which everyone can benefit.

This post was written by one of our current library interns, Amna Ali.

Gleeson Reference is home to a wealth of dictionaries ideal for quick searches on specific terms and phrases, or browsing and explorations related to subjects of interest, be it something as specific as “microbiology or molecular biology” and “investment” terminology or more broad-based such as cultural literacy or the classical age. Featured at the Reference Desk this month is a selection of dictionaries connected to the world of written and spoken language.

slangCassell’s Dictionary of Slang is one of a number of dictionaries at Gleeson that focus on slang and unconventional English. It features 70,000 words and phrases dating from the early 16th century to the present from English-speaking countries including Australia, New Zealand, South Africa, the United Kingdom, Ireland, Canada, parts of the Caribbean, and the United States. Entries include parts of speech, etymology, approximate time periods, geography, brief definitions, and occasionally, usage examples and cross-references. Slang tends to veer into the realm of the vulgar and coarse and it is no surprise that the dictionary of slang is filled with derogatory, scatological and sexual terms. Nonetheless, it is a valuable resource for students of literature and culture and all those interested in how slang’s provocative counter-language lives in and expands the world of communication. (Call Number: PE3721.G74 2000)

allusionsAmong the displayed resources is The Oxford Dictionary of Allusions. If ever the mention of the name of a real person, historical event, or literary character which is not simply a straightforward reference in a piece of writing or a conversation has intrigued you, this is a good source to turn to for concise and helpful reference help. Allusions used in the English language are grouped thematically under headings such as Anger, Change, Dreams, Explorers and Guilt and more than 180 other general headings. Besides a brief overview, the use of allusions is illustrated with quotations from a variety of literary works and other texts. Some 22 “special entries” are also included and treated in more depth, for example certain allusions drawn from Greek mythology and the Bible. Thus, if you have ever wondered what the “Dunkirk spirit” alluded to, or what is meant by a “Clark Kent like transformation”, delve into the dictionary of allusions for a readable and concise background to the usage. (Call Number: PE1580 .D45 2001)

prosodyProsody can be considered the specialized language of the craft of poetry. The Poet’s Dictionary: A Handbook of Prosody and Poetic Devices is a valuable resource for those seeking to understand this specialized language. It is a collection of 132 definitions and samples and caters in particular to practicing writers and poets. The author is an editor of The New York Quarterly and a professor of poetry and brings his years of experience into play to provide a thorough overview of each term and samples drawn in his own words “from the entire range of master poems of world poetry.” Turn to The Poet’s Dictionary for brief and accurate description of poetic devices and larger overviews of their usage, be they sonnets, epistles, epithalamions or canzones. (Call Number: PN44.5 .P3 1989)

(Posted by Debbie B.)

It looks like our community college system will be gaining some long-overdue visibility with President Obama’s nomination of USF alumna Martha J. Kanter to be the new U.S. Under Secretary of Education. Currently the Chancellor of Foothill-De Anza Community College District, Dr. Kanter’s doctoral dissertation at USF was on access to higher education for underrepresented students in the California community colleges.

As the USF community congratulates Dr. Kanter, a display in the lobby of Gleeson Library highlights her accomplishments. See her dissertation, list of publications, and articles about her at the library til the end of April.

Martha J. Kanter

Hello everyone!

Details for our next meeting:

Tuesday, May 12, 2009

Gleeson Library, Electronic Classroom (#139)

12 noon – 1 pm

Open to all of the USF Community!

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We’ll be discussing Barbara Kingsolver’s Animal Dreams, which is bound to be great, considering how popular Kingsolver’s works are.

If you have any doubts about this novel, check out its review in Library Journal:

Codi Noline returns to the sleepy mining town of Grace, Arizona, to care for her father, who is suffering from Alzheimer’s disease. It is a bad time for her: disappointed in her personal life, she has closed down her emotions in defense against a heart that cares too easily. “I had quietly begun to hope for nothing at all in the way of love, so as not to be disappointed,” she muses. In Grace, she finds friends, allies, and a love that endures. This strong second novel confirms the promise shown in The Bean Trees (LJ 2/1/88), a deserved critical and commercial success. Kingsolver’s characters are winners, especially the women, who take charge of life without fuss or complaint. Her novel compares to those of Ann Tyler in its engaging people and message that is upbeat but realistic. Kingsolver’s dedication to complex social and environmental causes enriches the story line. Highly recommended. Previewed in Prepub Alert, LJ 4/15/90.– David Keymer, SUNY Inst. of Technology, Utica

We hope to see you there!

If you want to get the book through the library, request it through Link+, which is free! It will be delivered to Gleeson Library in about 4 business days.

Photographer: Natalie Rose Mollaghan

Photographer: Natalie Rose Mollaghan

April 1-8, 2009  is Street Children Awareness Week at USF. Please drop by Gleeson Library|Geschke Center to see our book display on street children in Africa. You can borrow any of the publications on display. We’ve also created a companion online resource guide.

The week’s events are sponsored by USF Umthombo, the African Studies Department, International Studies Department, Politics Department, McCarthy Center, Health Promotion Services, Multicultural Student Services, and Street Action USA.

Here are some of the upcoming events:

Thursday April 2nd, 6-10PM at Candy Bar (1335 Fulton St. @ Divisadero) Photo Exhibit and Silent Auction

Tuesday April 7th, 7.30-9pm, Hayes Healy
Movie Night, “Yesterday”

Wednesday April 8th, 6.30-8.00pm, McLaren 250
Panel on Street Children and HIV/AIDS in Africa

Monday April 6 – Monday April 10, Crossroads Hallway
Photo Exhibition “Street Children in Durban”

Monday March 30st – April 11th, Gleeson Library
Street Children and HIV/AIDS in Africa Display

Interested in raising awareness on USF’s campus about street children in Africa? Visit the USF Umthombo Facebook page.