Access Medicine Error – “do not have permission to access this particular resource”

Users trying to access McGraw Hill’s Access Medicine may see this error:

“You are logged into the OpenAthens service, but you do not have permission to access this particular resource. Please contact the OpenAthens administrator at your institution to request access.”

As workaround please use the Access Medicine link from the Library Resource Page to access – http://resources.library.ubc.ca/page.php?id=328

Hina Matsuri and Koinobori Display

The Asian Library is currently hosting a display featuring hina ningyō and koinobori in celebration of Girl’s Day and Children’s Day.  

Hina ningyō are a set of dolls that represent the emperor, empress, attendants, and musicians in ancient court dress. They are set up on a tiered platform in celebration of hina matsuri (doll festival), a festival for girls held on March 3. The hina ningyō featured in the display, on loan from Gage Dierkes, were purchased from a Japanese gift store in Honolulu, Hawaii and given to her family in 1974 by her grandmother. Hina matsuri is celebrated by the family by eating hishimochi (diamond-shaped rice cakes) and drinking shirozake (made with rice malt and sake).  

Koinobori (carp streamers) are carp-shaped banners, flown in celebration of Children’s Day on May 5. In Japan, carps are a symbol of success, due to the ancient Chinese legend of a carp swimming upstream and becoming a dragon. The black carp represents the father, the red one the mother and the blue one the son. Traditionally, koinobori, were flown to celebrate the health and prosperity of male children, but the practice has come to include children of all genders.

The Japanese lanterns in the background are on loan from the Westside Japanese Language Society and were constructed by Akira Furuzawa. These Japanese lanterns, called chōchin are commonly displayed during matsuri (festivals).  

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“Doll Festival 【雛祭】”, Encyclopedia of Japan, JapanKnowledge, https://japanknowledge-com.eu1.proxy.openathens.net, (accessed Feb.20,2024) 

“koinobori 【鯉幟】”, Encyclopedia of Japan, JapanKnowledge, https://japanknowledge-com.eu1.proxy.openathens.net, (accessed Feb.20,2024) 

New Books at Education Library: March 2024

Check out the newest additions to our library! We’ve just received a batch of fresh reads, ranging from gripping fiction to enlightening non-fiction. Dive in and find your next favorite book today!

Click on the title for more information:

BF311 .M5163 2023 Invisible things / Andy J. Pizza & Sophie Miller.

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D804.48 .B76 2023 Run and hide / Don Brown.

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HV640.5.A6 M84 2023 From here: a memoir / Luma Mufleh.

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PZ7.S4654 Bi 2023 Big tree / Brian Selznick.

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PZ7.M6392 To 2022 Torch / Lyn Miller-Lachmann.

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PZ7.I9528 Gi 2022 Gigi and Ojiji / Melissa Iwai.

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PZ7.W4358 St 2023 Stateless / Elizabeth Wein.

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PZ7.1.M3699 Ot 2022 Out of a jar / Deborah Marcero.

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PZ7.1.D3982 Un 2022 Undercover Latina / Aya de León.

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PZ7.1.G6535 Al 2022 Also / E.B. Goodale.

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PZ7.1.W3452 Ph 2023 Phoebe’s diary / Phoebe Wahl.

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PZ7.1.M466 El 2023 Elena rides / Juana Medina.

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PZ7.1.M423 Wl 2023 The wilderness / Steve McCarthy.

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PZ7.5.H67 Tr 2017 Tricks / Ellen Hopkins.

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PZ7.7.T3743 Pr 2023 Parachute kids / Betty C. Tang.

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Kids Take Over UBC at Asian Library – Event Recap

Photo credit: Harshi Jhaveri

Photo credit: Harshi Jhaveri

On Sunday, February 18, Asian Library welcomed approximately 800 participants as part of Kids Take Over UBC, which is hosted by UBC Campus + Community Planning. The event brought together campus partners to host family-friendly activities in their venues and across the campus. Asian Library partnered with Nitobe Gardens for koi and garden-themed display activities, and offered games and storytimes for family members of all ages. Student librarians Nobu Kawaguchi, Fin Bartels and Grace Park supported the programming alongside the rest of the Asian Library team.

Kids Discover Asia: Discover Asian Games – Ages 5+
10:00am-4:00pm  Lunar New Year Riddles
1:00-3:00pm  Hopscotch
3:00-3:40pm  Japanese karuta Card Games and Korean Board Games
 Kids Discover Asia: Asian Language Storytimes & Kamishibai – Ages 0+
(*Storytimes are conducted in both English and Asian languages)
10:10-10:30am  Mandarin Storytime
11:20-11:40am  Korean Storytime
11:40am-12pm  Kamishibai Japanese Paper Theatre
1:30-1:45pm  Persian Storytime with Pardis Sherkani
2:15-2:30  Urdu and Hindi Storytime with Naveena Naqvi
 Kids Discover Asia: Get Crafty – All ages
10:40-11:20am Origami: Discover the art of origami and make koi fish and other animals and objects with paper.
12:30-1:00pm Kite Bookmarks: Create kite bookmarks to celebrate the Lunar New Year using discarded book covers.
1:00-1:30pm Koinobori (Carp Streamers): Construct your own carp streamer, a Children’s Day tradition in Japan.
2:00-3:30pm Mehndi by Meet: Experience beautiful henna skin decorations (space limited).
2:00-2:30pm Origami: Discover the art of origami and make koi fish and other animals and objects with paper.
2:30-3:00pm Squiggly insects and flowers: Make insects and flowers with pipe cleaners.
 Kids Discover Asia: A Japanese Garden Exploration – All ages
10:00am-4:00pm In addition to the above activities, UBC Asian Library and UBC Botanical Garden invite you to explore the magic of Nitobe Memorial Garden. Stroll along the pathways, take in the peaceful sights, sounds and smells while completing a scavenger hunt and connecting with nature.

We acknowledge that the UBC Point Grey campus is situated on the traditional, ancestral, and unceded territory of the xʷməθkʷəy̓əm (Musqueam).

New Books at the Law Library – 24/02/27

LAW LIBRARY level 3: KE229.M33 D45 2022 Jon S. Dellandrea, The Great Canadian Art Fraud Case: The Group of Seven and Tom Thomson Forgeries (Fredericton: Goose Lane Editions, 2022). LAW LIBRARY reference room (level 2): KE1042 .M23 2023 Bruce MacDougall, Canadian Personal Property Security Law, 3rd ed. (Toronto: LexisNexis, 2023). LAW LIBRARY level 3: KE4560 […]

Family Photographs in Open Collections

Family day is observed each year on the third Monday in February in most provinces across Canada. In British Columbia, the holiday was adopted in 2013 and was originally observed on the second Monday of February. This was the case until 2019, at which point the province moved the holiday to the third Monday of the month in order to align with the schedule that the rest of the country abides by.

In celebration of yesterday having been Family Day, this week’s blog post is a collection of family portraits from various sources found within Open Collections. Home to thousands of photographs, these portraits were found across several collections, either as stand-alone items or as part of family albums.

Timm’s Family:

            In this photograph, the Timms family stands in front of a small boat in Port Moody, B.C., thought to be from around 1910.

[Family Portrait]

This photograph features a family with parents and two small children standing in a garden. Thought to be taken between 1900-1920, there is no information on the identity of this family.

[Unger Family]

This image of the Unger family standing in front of Johnson Electric co. is from an envelope that contained film negatives. The envelope indicates that the film was developed for Mrs. Unger at Camera and Arts ltd. at 610 Granville St. in Vancouver, B.C. Thought to be from between 1904-1924.

[Ward Family, Vancouver, B.C.]

This photograph is of the Ward family giving a musical performance in front of Vancouver’s City Hall in 1940. The names of the family members are printed on the front of the image: “Marjorie, Doris, Walter, Lawrence, Lillian – conductor, James, Clara, Daddy Ward”.

[Photo Album of Unknown Family]

This photograph of a family kayaking is from the photo album of an unknown family, thought to be from between 1925-1940.

Shigetaka Sasaki family

This portrait is of the Shigetaka Sasaki family sitting in a garden, the date is unknown.

Niwatsukino family working on farm in Turin, Alberta

The Niwatsukino family with horses in Alberta, from 1942.

[Family wedding portrait]

This family wedding portrait features people dressed in both traditional Chinese garments as well as Western garments, the image is from some time after 1920.

Our piano mover and family

This photograph is of a family sitting on a front lawn. The hand written note at the bottom of the photograph identifies them as “our Piano mover and family”. Thought to be from between 1890-1899.

We hope you enjoyed this blog post and that you had an enjoyable long weekend. Thank you for reading!

If these photographs piqued your interest, there are many more family photographs available for browsing in Open Collections.

New Books at the Law Library – 24/02/20

LAW LIBRARY level 3: K564.C6 A76 2023 American Law Institute,, ALI-ELI Principles for a Data Economy: Data Transactions and Data Rights : as Adopted and Promulgated by the American Law Institute on May 18, 2021 and the European Law Institute on September 1, 2021 : Principles 1 to 40 (Philadelphia: The American Law Institute & […]

WE ARE HUMAN!: Film Discussion Event Recap

On Tuesday, February 6, approximately sixty-two in person participants and twenty-seven online participants attended a hybrid panel discussion featuring a documentary film on human rights violations in Japan. The event, which was hosted by UBC Asian Library and the Department of Asian Studies, centered around the film Watashitachi wa Ningen da! ワタシタチハニンゲンダ! (We are Human!) which was produced in 2022 by director Ko Chanyu, a second-generation Zainichi (‘residing in Japan’) Korean journalist and filmmaker.

The film can be viewed here (CWL required): https://resolve.library.ubc.ca/cgi-bin/catsearch?bid=12858063

This free public event, offered concurrently as part of UBC’s Arts Studies course, ASTU 201: Canada, Japan and the Pacific: Cultural Studies, highlighted the work of panelists with expertise on the history of contemporary issues of (im)migration, labour, and racism in Canada and Japan.

After watching a filmed interview by Director Ko, Dr. Ayaka Yoshimizu, Assistant Professor of Teaching, Department of Asian Studies & UBC-Ritsumeikan Academic Exchange Programs, moderated an enlightening discussion with panelists Dr. Christina Yi, Associate Professor of Modern Japanese Literature, Department of Asian Studies, and Dr. Evelyn Encalada Grez, Assistant Professor of Labour Studies Program, Sociology and Anthropology, Simon Fraser University.

Dr. Yi addressed the history of Zainichi Koreans and the Japanese government’s policies towards them as the foundation for subsequent policies regarding immigrants and refugees. Dr. Encalada Grez presented on similar human and labour rights issues in Canada, notably the migrant farm workers who are an essential part of Canadian and BC agriculture, yet are subject to inhumane living conditions and restrictions of basic human freedoms.

The following additional resources were recommended for those interested in furthering their knowledge:

 

Law Library Special Hours – February 2024

Feb 19Closed (Family Day)
Feb 20-239 am - 5 pm

Regular hours resume Feb 24

B.C. Historical Books Highlight – Pacific Crest Trails from Alaska to Cape Horn (1948)

CW: the book contains some outdated, racist, and derogatory language.

“You rest in the forest against a form-fitting log. Your eyes are narrow pools, your mood, dreamy lassitude. Your whole body is inert but receptive. The murmur of a distant waterfall comes alive; birds twinkle, twitter, chirp, and sing; the air you breathe has a taste on nose and palate of green humidity, with carbonated oxygens, and elusive perfumes; a deer drifts across a path of whiter light; and forest life, no longer afraid and furtive, is all about you” (Hazard, p. 65).

Part of the British Columbia Historical Books Collection, Joseph T. Hazard’s book Pacific Crest Trails from Alaska to Cape Horn is foremost a personal account of his journeys of mountaineering, hiking, fishing, and many more recreational adventures. Intermingled with these detailed personal tales of his experiences across the expansive highlands, Hazard shares local historic stories, practical information for visiting these locations, and expresses a passionate if optimistic view that the shared enjoyment of the Pacific Crest Trails can contribute to “social and national unity” between the “Three Americas” (p. 9). In support of a ‘new’ Pan-American vision, Hazard describes his wish for “many nations, cooperating in material things, living side by side in understanding friendship”, and encourages the “abandonment of the ‘bloody tenets’ of imperialism” (p. 10). Rooted in this hope for the future, Hazard’s book aims to promote international travel to visit the Pacific Crest Trails through quirky and sentimental personal accounts, and splendid descriptions of the beautiful natural scenery.

Available through UBC’s Open Collections, Hazard’s book includes many beautiful and unique photographs taken throughout his travels, some of which I have included in this blog post.

Lake Garibaldi

This book includes a few chapters on the beautiful Provincial Parks in British Columbia. Hazard shares stories of his treks through Mount Robson Provincial Park (ch. III) and Mount Garibaldi Provincial Park (ch. IV). This photo of Garibaldi Lake is from Chapter III, “Western Canada, A Hostess Neighbor” and can be found on page 32. (Un-fun fact of the day – it has been suggested that if the barrier of Garibaldi Lake gives way, the volume of water released could pose a serious threat to the town of Squamish)

The Black Buttes

This beautiful photo of Black Buttes, a volcano on Mt. Baker, is from chapter “Cascade Crest Trail of Washington”. This image is from page 64.

Battling a Hanging Glacier

Next up, quite possibly my favourite photograph from the book – from chapter VII, “Up Glacier Park with Margaret and Mac”, this photograph shows a man scaling a glacier face. This photograph is from page 97.

The Sugar Pine

This photograph of a man standing in front of a massive tree with his arms extended to emphasize it’s girth. This tree was said to be 200 feet tall and 12 feet wide at the time of this photograph. This photo is from page 192. (Now it’s time for the fun-fact of the day – Sugar Pines are the tallest of the Pinus species! Regularly growing close to 200 feet)

Camping in California’s Coastal Redwoods

From Chapter XIV, “California Tours Along the Beaches and Coastal Mountains”. Sun beams reach into a campsite through the canopy of massive redwood trees. This photograph is from page 225.

Climbing Party on a Cliff

This photograph of shows several people sitting on a cliff, looking down onto Tepoztlan, Mexico is from Chapter XVII, “Trails Lead South Through Mexico’s Highlands”. This photograph is from page 288.

I hope you enjoyed these photographs from Joseph T. Hazard’s book.

Thank you for reading!