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Middle Eastern Library Program

New content in ARTstor: Pattern in Islamic Art

Tags: , — Posted by Matt on August 19, 2008 at 3:26 pm

http://www.artstor.org/news/n-html/an-080605-wade.shtml

David Wade has partnered with ARTstor to distribute approximately 1,500 images of Islamic art in the Digital Library. These images illustrate patterns and design features found throughout the Islamic world, from the Middle East and Europe to Central and South Asia. The collection has been drawn from Wade’s photographic archive of over 4,000 images, which he has made available on his website, Pattern in Islamic Art. In addition to works photographed during his travels, Wade has supplemented the collection with drawings and diagrams produced for his various publications. These additional materials reflect Wade’s particular interest in symmetry and geometry. They illustrate common patterns, analyzing and breaking them down into their basic geometrical elements, thereby revealing the underlying principles of order and balance in Islamic art. Islamic artists and craftsmen employed these intricate patterns to adorn all types of surfaces, such as stone, brick, plaster, ceramic, glass, metal, wood, and textiles. The collection will contain examples of ornamentation from monumental architecture to the decorative arts.

New database added: Empire Online

Tags: , — Posted by Matt on August 19, 2008 at 3:23 pm

Empire Online provides full text access to primary source documents from the British Empire (the Empire encompassed Africa, the Americas, Australia, Oceania, and South Asia).  The documents include travel accounts, the literature of Empire, photography and illustration, religious material, and records on issues of race and class in the colonial context.  The years of coverage are from 1492 until 2007.

Empire Online is available from the library’s “Databases & Indexes to Articles” page, http://www.lib.utexas.edu/indexes/titles.html?let=E

LibraryThing content added to UT Library Catalog

Tags: , — Posted by Matt on August 19, 2008 at 3:16 pm

On Monday, June 23, we will be adding content from LibraryThing for Libraries into the Library Catalog.  In a nutshell, when you look at the full record for an item which is also a part of LibraryThing, you will see tags generated by LibraryThing users and “recommended books” in a box at the bottom of the full record.  This box is clearly labeled as content from LibraryThing.com.

LibraryThing (www.librarything.com) is a way for any individual to catalog their books.  You just add your book, tag it with whatever keywords come to mind, and add any ratings or reviews.  You are automatically connected with every other LibraryThing user who has that book and can see other reviews, other books they are reading, etc.  According to LibraryThing, there are 28 million books in LibraryThing.

LibraryThing for Libraries takes the content generated by LibraryThing users, cleans it up and makes it available for us to load into our catalog.  Patrons may find the tags useful as an additional discovery tool to subject headings and find the “recommended books” useful as a readers’ advisory (in other words, people who read Harry Potter also read the Golden Compass).

CFP: Arabic Literature Now: between Area Studies and the New Comparatism

Tags: , — Posted by Matt on August 19, 2008 at 3:13 pm

(re-posted from the Adabiyat list)

From: <whassan@uiuc.edu>
To: adabiyat@listhost.uchicago.edu
Date: Tue, 17 Jun 2008 21:12:47 -0500 (CDT)
Subject: [Adabiyat] CFP: Arabic Literature Now

Arabic Literature Now: Between Area Studies and the New Comparatism
A Special issue of Comparative Literature Studies
Edited by Amal Amireh and Waïl S. Hassan

Interest in Arabic literature in the United States has been sparked by Naguib Mahfouz’s winning of the Nobel Prize for literature in 1988, by multiculturalism, and by postcolonial studies, particularly Edward Said’s critical legacy. But in recent years, this interest has intensified because of the two Gulf wars, 9/11, and the on-going “War on terror.” Studying Arabic literature in the American academy and beyond cannot be abstracted from a context of Middle East politics and is taking place in the shadow of a “clash of civilization” ideology that posits the Arab and Muslim worlds as the dangerous other of western civilization.

As editors of a special issue of Comparative Literature Studies devoted to Arabic literature, we are seeking papers that take into account the complex contexts in which Arabic literature is being studied outside the Arab world at this historical juncture. Among the questions we are interested in are the following: What is the status of Arabic literary studies today? Has Arabic studies freed itself from the legacy of Orientalism? What is the impact of postcolonial theory on Arabic literary studies? What is the place of Arabic literature in the new articulations of comparative literature (from Gayatri Spivak’s Death of a Discipline to Haun Saussy’s Comparative Literature in an Age of Globalization) and world literature (e.g. Franco Moretti, David Damrosch, Pascale Casanova)? What roles have postcolonial theory, feminist theory, translation theory, and reception theory played, or can play, in such articulations? What are the points of contact between Arabic literature and those of Asia, Africa, Europe, the Americas, and Australia? How do issues of gender, sexuality, war, nationalism, globalization, and human rights figure in Arabic literature today? What are the pedagogical implications and challenges of the current interest in Arabic literature and culture?

We invite articles that reflect on these and related questions in connection with Arabic-language texts written in the Arab world and elsewhere as well as texts by Arab writers of Dutch, English, French, German, Hebrew, Portuguese, and Spanish expression.

The issue is scheduled to appear in late 2010. Completed papers will need to be submitted no later than 30 January 2009.  500-word proposals and brief CV are due by 30 September 2008 to Amal Amireh aamireh@gmu.edu and Waïl S. Hassan whassan@uiuc.edu. Contributions should conform to CLS style, and be between 6000 and 10,000 words. See the CLS style guide at http://cl-studies.psu.edu/submissions.shtml for further information.

Waïl S. Hassan
Associate Professor
Program in Comparative and World Literature
Center for African Studies
Center for South Asian and Middle Eastern Studies
University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign

Mailing address:
Program in Comparative and World Literature
3080 Foreign Languages Building
707 South Mathews Avenue
Urbana, IL 61801