Lexis+ Training Sessions

Location: Law Library Room 208 For current Allard School of Law students and faculty only. Registration is required . Enhance your law school studies with Lexis+ Canada, a leading online legal research service for cases, legislation, secondary materials, and more.  Angeline Han, a former BC law grad, will be coming to campus on February 8 […]

WE ARE HUMAN!: Documentary Film Screening + Panel Discussion at UBC Asian Library

Event Date: Tuesday, February 6, 2024
Time: 3:30 p.m. to 5:00 p.m. (PST)
Location: Hybrid (Asian Centre Auditorium: 1871 West Mall, Vancouver, BC V6T 1Z2, and Online)

Registration Link: https://libcal.library.ubc.ca/calendar/vancouver/we-are-human 

We honour, celebrate and thank the xʷməθkʷəy̓əm (Musqueam) and Syilx Okanagan peoples on whose territories the main campuses of the University of British Columbia have the privilege to be situated.

UBC Asian Library and the Department of Asian Studies invite the community to a public event featuring the documentary film, Watashitachi wa Ningen da! ワタシタチハニンゲンダ! (We are Human!), produced in 2022 by director Ko Chanyu, a second-generation Zainichi (‘residing in Japan’) Korean journalist and filmmaker. This award-winning film interrogates Japan’s immigration policies, surfacing issues of racism and discrimination. It can also cast reflections on British Columbia’s own disturbing relationship with its migrant foreign workers, a crucial labour force for BC agriculture.

This free public event, offered concurrently as part of UBC’s Arts Studies course, ASTU 201: Canada, Japan and the Pacific: Cultural Studies, includes guest lecturers providing insights into the history of contemporary issues of (im)migration, labour, and racism in Canada and Japan. The event will also
feature a panel discussion.

We will be discussing, not viewing, the film at this event. Participants are encouraged to view the film beforehand. UBC students and employees can access the film through the Library. For participants with other affiliations, please ensure to leave your email at the time of registration to receive a private link to
watch the film.

Panelists:
  • Evelyn Encalada Grez, Assistant Professor of Labour Studies Program, Sociology and Anthropology, Simon Fraser University
  • Christina Yi, Associate Professor of Modern Japanese Literature, Department of Asian Studies, University of British Columbia
Moderator:
  • Ayaka Yoshimizu, Assistant Professor of Teaching, Department of Asian Studies & UBC-Ritsumeikan Academic Exchange Programs, University of British Columbia

Everyone is invited to attend this free hybrid event. Registration is required.

For more information, please contact Saeyong Kim, Korean Studies Librarian at saeyong.kim@ubc.ca or Tomoko Kitayama Yen, Japanese Studies Librarian at tomoko.kitayama@ubc.ca.

Film Synopsis

On March 6, 2021, Rathnayake Liyanage Wishma Sandamali (aged 33) died in a state of starvation and organ failure following seven months of detention in an immigration detention centre in Nagoya, Japan; she had gone to a police station seeking protection from a violent relationship, but instead she was taken into custody for “illegal overstaying of visas,” after which her requests to return to Sri Lanka and subsequent requests for medical care and provisional release were repeatedly denied. The horrific circumstances of her death sparked a wave of citizen protests and brought the harshness of the Japanese government’s legal and institutional control of immigrants and refugees into the public consciousness. This documentary (winner of the fifth annual Muno Takeji Chiiki Minshū Journalism Award; selected Best Documentary, International New York Film Festival 2023) outlines the history of Japan’s Alien Registration Act, established primarily to control the Korean population in Japan in the aftermath of WWII, and illustrates how the oppressive framework of control has continued through to the present day, bringing the non-Japanese interviewees to share a common cry: “we are not animals—we are human!”

Newspaper Articles on Early Paleontological Findings in Western Canada

UBC’s Open Collections contains hundreds of thousands of materials covering a vast number of topics, making it an amazing resource for anyone with historical research interests. Personally, I find great joy in interest driven research, and one collection in particular that often returns excellent materials is the BC Historical Newspaper Collection.

This week I was interested in writing a blog post featuring historical news articles on paleontological findings in western Canada. I was pleased to find a great number of articles on discoveries in Northeastern British Columbia, Alberta, as well as international findings in 19th and 20th Centuries. This blog post features a few of the articles on some early Western Canadian fossil findings.

Since the late 19th Century, many paleontological fossils have been found in Western Canada, mainly concentrated around Northeastern B.C. and the Badlands in Southern Alberta. According to the Canadian Encyclopedia, at least 88 species of dinosaurs have been found in Canada (Dinosaurs and Canada, 2012).

Dinosaurs were unknown until the early to mid 19th Century, and the general understanding of these prehistoric animals was still developing when these newspaper articles were published. This elementary understanding is evident when reading articles such as this one found on page 3 of the October 1872 edition of the Cariboo Sentinel.

The article is concerning a fossilized bone that was found in a riverbed. At the time there was apparently only one individual “bold enough to express an opinion” on the fossil and they claimed that it was a vertebra from “a species of flying alligator”, of which the author seems slightly skeptical. While this idea may seem slightly silly as we now know enough to understand that the “flying alligator” description of dinosaurs is not entirely correct, considering the limited understanding and language for describing dinosaurs at the time it probably could have been worse. Unfortunately, I could not locate a follow up article or further information as to whether the specimen was ever identified or verified as a dinosaur fossil or not.

The following article is a short piece on Dinosaur remains found in Alberta and briefly recounts findings of Canadian geologist and paleontologist Lawrence Lambe. Found on page 2 of the October, 1898 edition of the Revelstoke Herald:

In October, 1911 the Daily News reported on the fossils found in Red Deer, Alberta being sent to the American Museum of Natural History rather than staying in Canada to be displayed at the Canadian National Museum in Ottawa. This arrangement was apparently due to permission given to the museum by the Canadian government many years prior.

The article is concluded in the following image:

In November 1913 the New Westminster News published this article on a report made by the vertebrate paleontologist of the Dominion government which discusses several amazing finds made near the Red Deer River in Alberta. These finds were reported as including several nearly complete skeletons of large dinosaurs some of which were thought to be new discoveries.

I hope you enjoyed reading these historical news articles and that maybe you were inspired to search within UBC’s Open Collections for any historical interests of your own!

Thank you for reading!

Works cited

Dinosaurs and Canada. The Canadian Encyclopedia. (2012, February 11). https://www.thecanadianencyclopedia.ca/en/article/dinosaur

 

Words in Allard School of Law Faculty Publication Titles in 2023

New books at the Asian Library (December 2023)

PK2659 A276 K856 2023
ਕੁਇਨਜ਼ ਲੈਂਡ: ਕਹਾਣੀ ਸੰਗ੍ਰਹਿ / ਆਗ਼ਾਜ਼ਬੀਰ / ਲੁਧਿਆਣਾ : ਚੇਤਨਾ ਪ੍ਰਕਾਸ਼ਨ

PK2659 D4465 B344 2023
ਬਾਗ਼ੀ ਹੋਈ ਪੌਣ / ਮਹਿੰਦਰਪਾਲ ਸਿੰਘ ਧਾਲੀਵਾਲ / ਬਰਗਾੜੀ, ਪੰਜਾਬ : ਪੀਪਲਜ਼ ਫ਼ੋਰਮ

PK2659 D46576 H38 2023
ਹੌਲ : ਨਾਵਲ / ਰੂਪ ਢਿੱਲੋ / Patiala : Caliber Publication

PK2659 H867 P57 2023
ਪੀਰੋ : ਨਾਵਲ / ਅੰਬਰ ਹੁਸੈਨੀ / Patiala : Gracious Books

PK2659 M2435 J84 2023
ਜੁਗਾੜੂ : ਨਾਵਲ / ਰਾਮ ਜੀ ਦਾਸ ਸੇਠੀ / ਲੁਧਿਆਣਾ: ਚੇਤਨਾ ਪ੍ਰਕਾਸ਼ਨ

PK2659 P3223 S48 2023
ਸੇਠਾਂ ਦੀ ਨੂੰਹ / ਨਰਿੰਦਰ ਪੰਨੂ / Patiala : Gracious Books

PK2659 R357 D34 2023
ਦਾਗ਼ੀ : ਨਾਵਲ / ਰਾਜਬੀਰ ਰੰਧਾਵਾ / ਚੰਡੀਗੜ੍ : ਸਪਤਰਿਸ਼ੀ ਪਬਲੀਕੇਸ਼ਨ

PK2659 S174 A43 2023
ਲਫ਼ ਦਾ ਪਾਂਧੀ / ਸਾਬਿਰ ਅਲੀ ਸਾਬਿਰ / ਲੁਧਿਆਣਾ : ਲਾਹੌਰ ਬੁੱਕ ਸ਼ਾਪ

PK2659 S3768 R57 2023
ਰਿਸ਼ਤਿਆਂ ਦੀ ਜ਼ਮੀਨ: ਚੋਨਵੀਆਂ ਮਿੰਨੀ ਕਹਾਣੀਆਂ / ਸੁਖਮਿੰਦਰ ਸੇਖੋਂ / ਚੰਡੀਗੜ੍ਹ : ਤਰਲੋਚਨ ਪਬਲਿਸ਼ਰਜ਼

PK2659.T373 T86 2022
ਤੂੰ ਅਤੇ ਪਿਕਾਸੋ: ਕਾਵਿ-ਸੰਗ੍ਰਹਿ / ਹਰੀ ਸਿੰਘ ਤਾਤਲਾ / ਲੁਧਿਆਣਾ : ਚਤਨਾ ਪ੍ਰਕਾਸ਼ਨ

BL1812 G63 Y3629 2022
诸仙纪 : 中国仙话八议 / 严优著 / 北京市 : 北京大学出版社

DS740 H36 2023
建立中華聯邦的芻議 : 從中西文化探索中國之出路 / 寒山碧著 / 新北 : 華夏出版有限公司

DS754.82 C47125 2023
马背上的朝廷 : 巡幸与清朝统治的建构(1680-1785) / (美)张勉治著; 董建中译 / 南京市 : 江苏人民出版社

G1046 E27 B4125 2023
移民的世界地圖: 建構新團結 / 凱瑟琳·威托爾·德文登撰寫; 瑪德蓮·本努瓦-奇尤製圖 ; 王紹中翻譯 / 高雄市 : 無境文化事業股份有限公司

HE3288 M325 2023
近代中国铁路制度与功能的演进 : 基于中央与地方的关系 / 马陵合著 / 北京市 : 社会科学文献出版社

ND1043.4 L5236 2023
走进宋画 : 10-13世纪的中国文艺复兴 / 李冬君著 / 北京市 : 北京时代华文书局

NK1483 A1 Z4683 2023
断裂与绵延 : 中国现代设计史研究 / 周博著 / 北京市 : 北京大学出版社

PL2924 C5335 Z924 2022
为有荷花唤我来 : 叶嘉莹在南开 / 沈立岩主编 / 北京 : 中国大百科全书出版社

PL2952 E35 J53 2023
加拿大鐵女手札: 台灣移民生活思聞錄 / 佩格澀思著 / 臺北市 : 致出版

PN5369 S52 Z4685 2023
上海老画报 / 周利成著 / 北京市 : 中国文史出版社

B5241 A98 2023
訂正可能性の哲学 / 東浩紀 / 東京都品川区 : Genron

DS33.7 K56 2022
近世の帝国の繁栄とヨーロッパ / 総監修姜尚中 ; 編集委員青山亨, 伊東利勝, 小松久男, 重松伸司, 妹尾達彦, 成田龍一, 古井龍介, 三浦徹, 村田雄二郎, 李成市 / 東京 : 集英社

DS834.1 T656 2023
天皇の歴史と法制を見直す / 所功 / 東京都新宿区 : 藤原書店

DS868.2 K39 2023
戦国期守護権力の研究 / 川岡勉 / 京都市 : 思文閣出版

GR340 N47355 2022
日本異類図典 / 監修朝里樹 / 東京 : 株式会社

HC465 P6 A56 2023
貧困の計量政治経済史 / 安中進 / 東京 : 岩波書店

HN723.5 I39 2023
いま解決したい政治課題 : 政治と宗教, 学校崩壊, 定住外国人参政権 / 有田芳生, 竹村雅夫, 金泰泳 / 東京都文京区 : 社会評論社

N8193 A4 B87 2023
仏師と絵師 : 日本・東洋美術の制作者たち / 筒井忠仁編 / 京都市 : 思文閣出版

P306.2 K69 2022
翻訳とはなにか : 記号論と翻訳論の地平, あるいは, 世界を多様化する変換過程について / 小山亘編著 ; 浅井優一編 / 東京 : 三元社

PL876 A4246 R365 2023
ラーメンカレー / 滝口悠生 / 東京 : 文藝春秋

SF442.63 J3 E53 2023
〈猫〉の社会学 : 猫から見る日本の近世~現代 / 遠藤薰 / 東京 : Keiso Shobo

BR1325 R975 2023
새로 쓴 한국 기독교 의 역사  / 류 대영 지음 / 서울 특별시 : 한국 기독교 역사 연구소

DS558.6 K8 K56 2023
전쟁 자본주의 의 시간 : 한국 의 베트남 전쟁 담론 과 재현 의 역사 / 김 주현 지음 / 서울 특별시 : 성균관 대학교 출판부

DS921.5 S63 N34 2023
냉전 의 벽 : 평화로운 일상 을 가로 막는 냉전 의 유산 / 김 려실 외 7인 지음 / 부산 : 호밀밭

DS922.35 K568 2023
6월 항쟁 과 김 대중, 김 영삼, 민추협 / 글쓴이 김 도현 / 경기도 파주시 : 리북

E184.K6 Y53 2023
재미 한인 1세 와 2세 의 삶 과 인종 갈등 : 상업 소수 민족 에서 주류 소수 민족 으로의 변화 / 이 정덕, 박 계영 지음 / 경기도 고양시 : 學古房

GV199.44 K6 A54 2023
침묵 하는 산 : 일제 강점기 조선 산악인 의 그림자 / 안 치운 지음 / 경기도 파주시 : 한길사

HD920.5 K5328 2023
조선 전기 과전법 연구 / 김 태영 지음 / 서울시: 경희 대학교 출판 문화원

PL958 S6586 2023
한국 고전 문학 의 이해 / 송 재용 저 / 서울시 : 박문사

PL975.4 P34 2023
백성 의 말 하려 하니 목 이 메고 눈물 난다 : 주해 조선 후기 현실 비판 가사 / 진 경환 / 서울 : 문예원

PL994.24 T6 A73 2023
아디오스 땅고 / 하 동현 소설집 / 부산 광역시 : 가을

PN1993.5 K6 A75 2023
한국 영화 100년사 일제 강점기 : 핍박 의 시대 에 꽃 피운 한국 영화사 그 애정 의 기록 / 안 태근 지음 / 서울 특별시 : 글로벌 콘텐츠

Bookselling Industry Overview

Bookselling Industry Overview melissa

Lowry Manuscripts (Re)Launch

Many thanks to guest blogger Malcolm Fish for contributing the below post! Malcolm is a graduate student at the UBC School of Information and has just completed a Co-op position with RBSC. He’ll be continuing on with RBSC this term in a Graduate Academic Assistant (GAA) position.


[Lowry] On board the ferry to Gabriola. BC-1614-015

UBC Library Rare Books and Special Collections is pleased to announce the (re)launch of the landmark Malcolm Lowry Manuscripts Collection. One of the largest single collections of Malcolm Lowry records worldwide, UBC has been collecting Lowry materials since the initial deposit of the Malcolm Lowry papers by Lowry’s widow, Margerie Bonner Lowry, in 1961. Since that initial deposit, the collection has grown substantially, now spanning more than six meters of textual records, more than 1000 photographs, and a variety of A/V materials, including a copy of the movie adaptation of Lowry’s seminal novel, Under the Volcano. Now that work assessing and redescribing the Collection is complete, researchers and educators can access and search this incredible collection more effectively than ever.

Summary of Work Completed

The Malcolm Lowry Manuscripts Collection is one of UBC’s oldest keystone research collections. Given the scope of the holdings, any work undertaken to update and improve the collection’s inventory records and access descriptions was going to require substantial time and effort to effect. RBSC was able to acquire funding specifically to undertake an overhaul of the Collection in 2023. I was hired as a Co-op student to inventory, assess, and redescribe the Collection.

Work on the Collection was completed in four stages. First, I completed a full physical inventory of all the Malcolm Lowry materials, and compared this inventory with the existing finding aid for the Collection. During the inventory stage, I also noted any preservation issues for future treatment. Fortunately, I did not find any urgent concerns.

[Lowry and Margerie on a street]. BC-1614-664

Once I completed the inventory and confirmed the accuracy of the information in the finding aid, I began stage two, which consisted mostly of data entry. The old PDF finding aid predated current archival descriptive standards and the archival database, AtoM (Access to Memory), used by UBC. Useful information (file titles, date ranges, etc.) was taken from that finding aid and entered into AtoM, forming the file-level descriptions now available for easy searching and perusal.

During stage three, I focused on increasing intellectual control of the Collection’s many sub-collections. The Malcolm Lowry Manuscripts Collection is comprised of the core Malcolm Lowry Papers and many smaller personal collections donated by or purchased from individuals related to Malcolm Lowry. Many of these smaller collections had previously been considered distinct entities related to the Lowry Papers, but not part of them. At times they were listed twice, once in the old PDF finding aid and also as separate groupings, leading to confusion. I examined each of the sub-collections to determine whether they should be subsumed under the Malcolm Lowry Manuscripts Collection umbrella as a sous-founds (a subdivision of a fonds based on the structure of the creator or the organization of its activity) or maintained as separate, but related materials.

Stage four was reserved for the extensive Photographs sous-fonds. Prior to my work, only about 200 of the more than 1000 photographs in the Malcolm Lowry Manuscripts Collection had been described. Many of the Collection photographs originally came in the form of three photo albums. Previous RBSC staff had removed these photographs from the albums for long-term preservation purposes, but as a result, important contextual information about the order of photographs in the albums was missing. Based on numbered annotations made on the pages of the photograph albums, I added notes about which photographs had come from which albums, and updated the descriptions in the Photographs sous-fonds descriptions. The process was exactly as convoluted as it sounds, but it all led to a significantly expanded set of descriptions of one of the most frequently accessed parts of the Collection.

Once stages one through four were completed, the AtoM record for the Collection was restructured and updated to match the changes described above and descriptions from the collection down to the file and item level were uploaded, resulting in the newly (re)launched Malcolm Lowry Manuscripts Collection page.

Changes to the Collection

The Collection is now organized by creator under the Malcolm Lowry Manuscripts Collection umbrella. For example, the Margerie Lowry collection is now SF02 – Margerie Lowry Papers under the Collection umbrella. Similarly, photographs and microfilm have been given their own sous-fonds for ease of searching. These are SF13 – Photographs and SF14 – Microfilm.

For those familiar with the Collection, a few changes to the descriptions have been made, for example “Papers” is now used instead of “fonds” (e.g., SF03 – Earle Birney Papers, SF04 – Harvey Burt Papers). The Lowry Family fonds is also now also a sous-fonds under the Collection umbrella (SF12 – Lowry Family Papers). In order to maintain the accuracy of citations that refer to the previous descriptions, unique identifiers assigned to each part of the collection have been retained for searching purposes. This will allow all older citation information to remain relevant should new users need to track down a specific source, reference, or citation which predates the relaunch.

Ongoing Work

Lowry, Loughrigg How, Lake District. Author’s favorite photograph [p. is cropped with the inscription: Malcolm Lowry, author of Hear Us O Lord From Heaven Thy Dwelling place which will be published by J.B. Lippincott Company]. BC-1614-125

Once the Collection had been overhauled, I commenced processing backlogged acquisitions related to Malcolm Lowry. These include the Douglas Day Papers (SF15 – Douglas Day Papers), the Rudy Wurlitzer Papers (SF16 – Rudy Wurlitzer Papers), and several other small additions which we hope to add in 2024.

The Malcolm Lowry Manuscripts Collection is one of UBC’s keystone research collections and one of the largest single collections of Malcolm Lowry materials in the world. Researchers and educators frequently come to UBC specifically to access this collection. Overhauling, inventorying, and restructuring the collection has been a satisfying project, which ensures future users are able to effectively search the Collection and find what they are looking for.

Season’s greetings from RBSC!

Drawing found behind a framed photograph in the Lok Tin Lee fonds, c. 1955

Just a reminder that the Rare Books and Special Collections satellite reading room will be closed from Monday, December 25, to Monday, January 1, inclusive. Additionally, the RBSC offices will be closed on the following stat holidays: Monday, December 25; Tuesday, December 26; and Monday, January 1.

RBSC’s offices and our satellite reading room will reopen on Tuesday, January 2.

We look forward to seeing you in the New Year!

Emily Carr, 1871-1945

Tomorrow, December 13th, is the birthday of famous Canadian artist Emily Carr. In honour of her, today’s blog post is a spotlight on the artist.

Carr was, as is eternalized on her gravestone, a lover of nature. She was a prolific landscape painter and developed an incredibly unique style that was influenced by early modernism and post-impressionist styles. While Carr’s art career did not gain public recognition until she was 57 years old, she is now known as a renowned artist and author, having created some of Canada’s most famous paintings and sketches. Before finding this success, Carr was largely isolated from the artistic world. After gaining recognition by the National Gallery of Canada, she met and became associated with the Group of Seven (Emily Carr, 2013). Finally achieving recognition after being largely isolated from the artistic world and working in relative solitude for many years was inspiring for Carr and resulted in a period of prolific painting and the creation of some of her most famous works (Emily Carr, 2013).

After developing chronic illness in her later years, Carr focused more attention toward writing and published three books before her death in 1945. Two more books as well as sketchbooks and journals of Carr’s were published posthumously (Emily Carr, 2013). Many of these written works have been completely digitized and made available through UBC’s open collections.

Hundreds of Thousands – the Journal of Emily Carr, 1966:

Emily Carr had a pet monkey called Woo. Carr was extremely fond of little Woo, who is mentioned regularly throughout her journal with stories of mischief, playfulness and general adorability.

This journal entry from September 9th, 1933 includes an excerpt in which Carr recalls caring for Woo when she was ill after ingesting some paint. From page 57.

This portrait of Woo, done by Carr, can be found on p. 107 of  the publication of her journal, the original is currently housed in the Royal BC Museum archives.

Letters to Ruth Humphrey:

UBC Archives houses at least 48 letters from Emily to her friend Ruth Humphrey which touch on topics such as art/drawing, travel, Emily’s health and ongoing illness. In this letter Emily is updating her friend on her health:

Klee Wyck:

Carr published her first book in 1941 which was recognized nationally and received the Governor General’s award that year. Klee Wyck is titled after the name that was given to Carr while she was living amongst the Indigenous people of Ucluelet, British Columbia in 1914. The book is a partly autobiographical collection of short stories in which Carr recounts her time living with West Coast First Nations. The book also includes sketches car did during this time, including this one from page 103:

The first page of the book is the beginning of her recounting arriving in Ucluelet:

The Book of Small:

Published in 1942, part 1 of The Book of Small reminiscences on the author’s childhood in Victoria.

Pause: a sketchbook:

            Carr went to England to study and in 1902 she became very ill, subsequently spending 18 months in Sunhill Sanatorium in England. Pause (1953) was published posthumously and features sketches she created during that time alongside her notes on each sketch.

Nelson Daily News:

            Emily Carr passed away on 2nd March, 1945 at the age of 74 after experiencing years of health issues following several heart attacks and subsequent chronic illness. The Nelson Daily News published this article the day after she passed:

We hope you enjoyed this blog post! If you are interested, there are many more of Carr’s written works available through UBC’s Open Collections. Here are links to several of them:

The House of All Sorts (1944)

Growing Pains: the autobiography of Emily Carr (1946)

The Heart of a Peacock (1953)

Works cited:

Emily Carr. The Canadian Encyclopedia. (2013, June 23).

https://www.thecanadianencyclopedia.ca/en/article/emily-carr

Asian Library closed for space improvements from January 2 to February 4