In this issue:
- Salon Series: What Does it Mean to Respect Nonhuman Animals?
- Halloween at Fogler!
- Literature Review Workshop Series for Graduate Students
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Cod Coasts now available from the University of Maine Press
- Looking for election background information?
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Featured resource: Northeast Archives of Folklore and Oral History (NAFOH) LibGuide
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Salon Series: What Does it Mean to Respect Nonhuman Animals?
The third event in Fogler Library’s exciting Salon Series, “What Does it Mean to Respect Nonhuman Animals,” takes place on Tuesday, Oct. 29 from 6—7:30 p.m. This event is available both in person at The Salon at Fogler Library, and via Zoom.
Whether they are treated as consumables, research subjects, companions, or family, human civilization relies heavily on the lives of other animals. Given these disparate — and not necessarily mutually exclusive — ways of interacting with nonhuman animals, what does it mean to respect them? Which ideas and practices serve this end? Which cultures and traditions provide relevant insights? How might we treat animals as nonhuman persons?
Please click here to view the event flyer.
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Halloween at Fogler!
Fogler Library is hosting two events on Wednesday, October 30 to celebrate the spooky season.
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At 6 p.m. in the second floor Salon, we’ll host a Literary Costume Contest, with a prize awarded for the best literary-themed costume. There will also be refreshments!
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And at 7 p.m., also in the second floor Salon, we are hosting a Ghosts of Maine author talk led by Marcus Librizzi, the author of several volumes of Maine-based ghost stories and folklore as well as a writer of dark fiction and a professor in the University of Maine System. There will be a short reading from his work and a conversation about his insights on horror fiction, Maine ghost tales, and other spooky topics for Halloween. Some books will be available for purchase, and refreshments will be available.
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Literature Review Workshop Series for Graduate Students
In November, the Research & Instruction Department is offering a series of four Zoom-based workshops to support graduate students who are working on literature reviews. The four sessions each cover a different topic: Citation Management (Nov. 5), Strategic Searching (Nov. 6), Citation Tracing (Nov. 12), and Research Metrics (Nov. 13). The sessions all run from 4–5 p.m. Please register on our Workshops page for each session you wish to attend. Once registered you will receive a Zoom link. Please contact librarian Heather Perrone with any questions.
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Cod Coasts now available from the University of Maine Press
The University of Maine Press is pleased to announce the publication of Cod Coasts: Cultural Landscapes of the Cod Fishery from Cape Cod to Labrador by Stephen J. Hornsby, professor of Geography and Canadian Studies and former director of the Canadian-American Center at the University of Maine.
This beautifully illustrated book draws on a wealth of scholarship and field research to tell the story of the importance of the cod industry to northeastern North America, and details the rise of distinctive and historically important landscapes in the maritime northeast. These areas include the Gaspé peninsula in Québec; many points in Newfoundland and Labrador, including the port of St. John’s; Cape Breton Island and other points in Nova Scotia; the Channel Islands in the Gulf of St. Lawrence; Cape Cod and the fisheries of Massachusetts; and the town of Castine, Maine, a leader in the American cod fishery until the mid-nineteenth century.
Cod Coasts is available from the University of Maine Press for $40.00 and can be ordered through the UM Press website, or by contacting Betsy Rose at betsy.rose@maine.edu.
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Looking for election background information?
Fogler Library’s Hot Topics: Elections guide provides links to news coverage, analysis, information on current races, and information on voter registration.
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In complying with the letter and spirit of applicable laws and pursuing its own goals of diversity, the University of Maine System does not discriminate on the grounds of race, color, religion, sex, sexual orientation, transgender status, gender, gender identity or expression, ethnicity, national origin, citizenship status, familial status, ancestry, age, disability physical or mental, genetic information, or veterans or military status in employment, education, and all other programs and activities. The University provides reasonable accommodations to qualified individuals with disabilities upon request. The following person has been designated to handle inquiries regarding non-discrimination policies: Director of Equal Opportunity, 5703 Alumni Hall, University of Maine, Orono, ME 04469-5754, 207.581.1226, TTY 711 (Maine Relay System).
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