Friday, April 3, 2020

HathiTrust Provides Emergency Temporary Access to Half of UNL’s Book Collection


The COVID-19 crisis has made the collections of many research libraries around the United States physically inaccessible, including the more than 3 million volumes in the University of Nebraska-Lincoln Libraries and the Marvin and Virginia Schmid Law Library. Fortunately the HathiTrust Digital Library, a digital repository that provides long-term preservation and access services for millions of books and journals digitized from its member libraries’ collections, has granted UNL Libraries emergency, expanded temporary access to materials in its collection. Now UNL students, faculty and staff will have full-text access to 50 percent of UNL Libraries’ collection digitally, including those materials that are copyright protected.

The UNL Libraries, a longstanding member of the HathiTrust community, was one of 110 libraries that applied for the Emergency Temporary Access Service (ETAS). Claire Stewart, Dean of Libraries, and Casey Hoeve, Associate Professor and Head of Content & Collections, worked on the ETAS application on UNL’s behalf.  

I know how frustrating this is for our faculty and students to not have access to physical materials,” explained Stewart, “that is why we are excited to announce that the HathiTrust Digital Library is temporarily expanding access for our users during this emergency and at least half our collection will be available online.

The main features of the emergency access are:

        Continued access to the physical scholarly record — UNL’s print collection — via digital copies in HathiTrust.

        Reading access to books online, within a web browser (no full downloads).

        Ability to “check out” a copy for 60 minutes, with an auto-renew feature for books in active use, and with a maximum use time of 2 hours. Access to items is 1-1. For example, if we have two copies in our collection, two UNL users (faculty, staff, students) will be allowed concurrent access to the digital item in HathiTrust.

Since approval, Hoeve and others have developed a libguide that provides UNL faculty and students easy-to-follow login procedures and additional information about the HathiTrust Digital Library and ETAS. 

To search for HathiTrust (Expanded) online materials:
  • visit the HathiTrust digital library
  • click or tap LOG IN
  • select "University of Nebraska-Lincoln" from the drop-down menu
  • click or tap CONTINUE
You will be prompted to log in with your UNL Credentials.

The Libraries ASKus chat is open to assist anyone having trouble searching the digital library and staff at the Law Library can be reached at lawref@unl.edu.


Wednesday, February 26, 2020

CANCELLED -- 8th Annual HILT Training Conference

-- Due to COVID-19, this event has been cancelled.--
Center for Digital Research in the Humanities and UNL Libraries will be hosting the 8th annual HILT
training conference. HILT, Humanities Intensive Learning and Teaching, is a 4-day training institution
that will be held on UNL’s campus May 18th through the 21st. On May 22nd, conference attendees
are invited to join a day of special experiences including tours of the Sheldon Museum of Art,
Nebraska State Capitol Building, and Morrill Hall. 


The conference offers keynotes, ignite-styled talks, and local cultural heritage excursions. Attendees
will select one of nine courses to take during the conference. Course options include: 


  • Anti-Racist Feminist Digital Humanities
  • Critical Digital Curation: Taking Care of Black Women’s Material Culture
  • Getting Started with Data, Tools, and Platforms
  • Introduction to Text Encoding
  • Introduction to Web Development and Design Principles
  • Latinx Digital Praxis: From the Archive to the Digital
  • Spatial Analysis: Theory, Methods, and Applications
  • Teaching DH: Assignment, Syllabi, Curricula
  • Text Analysis Methods & Practice 


The HILT conference is open for researchers, students, early career scholars and cultural heritage
professionals who would like to learn more about Digital Humanities theory, practice, and culture.
Registration is now open and is due by May 1st. 


For more information and registration please visit: http://dhtraining.org/hilt/conferences/hilt-2020/ 


Monday, February 24, 2020

Student Makes Fun Discovery in Cather Collections

By Caitlin Steiner

William Kelly, a graduate student in the UNL Department of History, was working with new items for
the Charles Cather collection when he came across a fun discovery, a short rhyme in an autograph book written in Willa Cather’s hand. Kelly works as an intern in the Archives & Special Collections, has an interest in Cather, and has been assisting Mary Ellen Ducey, University Archivist, by doing an in-depth review of items to add to the collection. During Kelly’s closer look, an old pocket autograph book caught his eye. The book belonged to Willa’s brother Douglass Cather, and dated back to 1890. The autograph book is similar to how students of today would sign each other’s yearbooks with farewell messages and poems. 
Dear Douglass
Learn your lessons, mind your teacher 
marry a girl & pay the preacher,
 die and fly to the “golden shore”
 and don’t be a sell [sic] anymore.
The medical advice of your sister WM Cather Jr. 
Last summer, Kelly interned in Red Cloud, Nebraska at the National Willa Cather Center. It was here
where Kelly learned much about Willa’s life. 
“I wouldn’t have been able to pinpoint why this was so unique, had it not been for that experience in
Red Cloud,” stated Kelly. 
The most striking piece of Willa’s message was her signature. Willa signed off her poem as,
The medical advice of your sister WM Cather Jr.” Willa would have been around the age of 16 at
the time, starting to adopt male styles, and aspiring to become a doctor. This is shown through her
medical advice and referring to herself as William (WM) Jr. 
“To have the smallest contribution to people’s understanding of Willa Cather...is pretty cool,” said Kelly. 
Kelly has enjoyed working with the Cather collection and reading Willa’s books. 
“I always hated to read fiction, until I read Willa Cather,” said Kelly, “now she makes me proud to
be a Nebraskan.”

Monday, February 3, 2020

Digital Humanities Afternoons


Join us for two talks on February 12, 2020, at 3:30 pm in the Peterson Room, Love Library (221LLS) about important project in the digital humanities. The first talk is “How (not) to run a digital humanities startup: Building our shared digital cultural heritage and connecting creatively to artists and makers through the last five millennia" by Luke Hollis, founder of  Archimedes Digital (https://archimedes.digital), a non-profit digital humanities startup focused on preserving and offering access to our shared cultural heritages, and visiting researcher at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. 



Hollis was a UCARE Fellow with the Walt Whitman Archive and graduated from UNL in 2010. In the past, he has assisted in the development of digital humanities research projects with over 120 cultural heritage institutions and authored software that has been adopted by the open source community for publishing classical languages datasets. Archimedes has partnered with American research centers and historical sites in over 30 countries to digital record and share our histories so that they can inspire and inform the next generations for years to come.

The second talk on “UNL Campus Archaeology: Building Digital Resources” by Dr. Effie Athanassopoulos an Associate Professor in Anthropology and Classics and Religious Studies at UNL. She is a historical archaeologist with interests in landscape, identity formation, material culture, and the role of digital technologies in teaching and research. In the past four years, Athanassopoulos has been working with archaeological collections recovered from excavations on the UNL Campus. These efforts have led to the UNL Campus Archaeology project, a research project that relates directly to Nebraska’s heritage. Through classroom based research and collaboration, the faculty/student team is analyzing and reassessing archaeological and historical materials to explore the lives of Lincoln’s residents and the city’s early urban development. A selection of this material will become available via a digital exhibit and later on as a digital archive. Her talk will provide an overview of these efforts and discuss the current state of the project.
 


Dr. Athanassopoulos’ primary research interests are in Mediterranean archaeology. She has been carrying out fieldwork in southern Greece, in the region of Nemea, and is the author of a monograph titled “Landscape Archaeology and the Medieval Countryside: Results of the Nemea Valley Archaeological Project” (American School of Classical Studies at Athens Publications, Princeton, 2016).


Thursday, January 30, 2020

Retro Gaming, Feb 10-14, 2020

Calling all Gamers! Get ready to gear up for the biggest battle of retro gaming. For one week Love Library will be celebrating Retro Games with an interactive simulation exhibit. Students will be able to use laptops set up in the library link to play old games from LSD: Dream Emulator to Dr. Mario and more! The fun doesn’t stop there- each day from 1-2pm, one student will be able to face off against a pro library staff member. Feeling up to the challenge? With new games to explore and exciting new competitions each day- you aren’t going to want to miss this!
     Along with playing games all week, pop by at one of our educational talks! Two talks will be given throughout the week educating on the importance of preserving gaming software on Tuesday & Thursday, starting at 2 pm in Love Library's Link. The first talk will be on Tuesday. “Game Software Preservation, Emulation, and Copyright,” will discuss the history and challenges that go into preserving this software. The second talk, “Game Cartridge Backup Demonstration,” will be held on Thursday. This will be a demonstration on backing up your games and files to specialty hardware. Both talks support preserving retro gaming and recognize the importance these games hold in our technology’s history. 

Competition Schedule: 
Monday, Feb. 10
Dr. Mario against Miranda McCowan
Fastest time to beat Virus Level set to 8 with Speed set to Hi wins!
Tuesday, Feb 11.
LSD: Dream Emulator against Andy Pederson
Whoever can visit the most dreamscapes in 5 minutes wins!
Wednesday, Feb 12. 
Lemonade Stand against Jessica Dussault
The person with the most assets at the end of day 10 wins!
Thursday, Feb 13.
Bubble Bobble against Jason Bougger
Best score in 5 minutes wins!
Friday, Feb 14.
Lode Runner: The Legend Returns against Greg Tunink 
The best score in 2-player competition wins! Best out of three levels.