Showing 6 of 6 Results

Hutchins Library News Blog

01/24/2019
profile-icon Amanda Peach

On Thursday, Jan. 31st, the Berea College Convocation series will host Flamenco Louisville at 3pm in Phelp's Stokes.

 


 

Intrigued by Flamenco? Consider checking out one of these items,
currently on display near Circulation:


Cover Art The Tragic Myth by Edward F. Stanton
Call Number: 861 G2154zs
Publication Date: 1978

 

01/18/2019
Unknown Unknown

This brass ensemble features a big band sound that moves between New Orleans style music and contemporary gospel with a splash of jazz. While not a Mardi Gras band, the ensemble uses the same instruments—trombones, sousaphones, and euphoniums. The addition of drums and keyboards creates their signature sound.

If you enjoyed the music of Zeb Harrison & The Sounds of Praise, check out these CDs across from circulation:

Cover Art Re:fresh by Life East Worship
Call Number: CD 781.63 R332
 
 
Cover Art Honor the lamb by Belleville A Cappella Choir
Call Number: CD 781.621 S727 v.11
 
 
 
Cover Art Move upstairs by Como Mamas (Musical group)
Call Number: CD 785.254 C735m
 
 
 
 
No Subjects
01/15/2019
profile-icon Amanda Peach

 

Check out Jason's chapter in:

Piano in a sycamore : writing lessions from the Appalachian Writer's Workshop by Silas House; Marianne Worthington
Call Number: 081 P581 2017 - BC Scholarship Collection (3rd Floor)
Publication Date: 2017
“Looking Beyond the Self in Creative Nonfiction.” by Jason Howard
 
 
01/08/2019
Unknown Unknown

Queer monthly #5: All things Trans*

This month we will focus on trans*, looking into the sexual and gender aspects. Please bear with me, there are quite a view terms that we need to go over.

Vocabulary!

Trans*The asterisk placed after Trans has been used in many different ways. Some folks think of it as being more inclusive towards gender non-conforming and non-binary folks. But others have offered critique that it feels exclusionary towards GNC and non-binary folks for enforcing a binary expectation to “fill in the blank" for trans man or trans woman.  There have also been discussions/critique regarding the origin of the asterisk.

Trans man: A person may choose to identify this way to capture their gender identity as well as their lived experience as a transgender person.  Some trans men may also use the term FTM or F2M to describe their identity.

Trans woman: A person may choose to identify this way to capture their gender identity as well as their lived experience as a transgender person.  Some transwomen may also use MTF or M2F to describe their identity.

Transgender: Adjective used most often as an umbrella term, and frequently abbreviated to “trans.” This adjective describes a wide range of identities and experiences of people whose gender identity and/or expression differs from conventional expectations based on their assigned sex at birth. Not all trans people undergo medical transition (surgery or hormones).  Some commonly held definitions:

1. Someone whose determination of their sex and/or gender is not universally considered valid; someone whose behavior or expression does not “match” their assigned sex according to society.

2. A gender outside of the man/woman binary.

3. Having no gender or multiple genders.

Transition: An individualized process by which transsexual and transgender people “switch” from one gender presentation to another. There are three general aspects to transitioning: social (i.e. name, pronouns, interactions, etc.), medical (i.e. hormones, surgery, etc.), and legal (i.e. gender marker and name change, etc.). A trans* individual may transition in any combination, or none, of these aspects.

Transsexual (TS): A person who lives full-time in a gender different than their assigned birth sex and gender.  Many pursue hormones and/or surgery. Sometimes used to specifically refer to trans people pursuing gender or sex confirmation.

Pronouns: Linguistic tools used to refer to someone in the third person.  Examples are they/them/theirs, ze/hir/hirs, she/her/hers, he/him/his.  In English and some other languages, pronouns have been tied to gender and are a common site of misgendering (attributing a gender to someone that is incorrect.)

Misgendering: Attributing a gender to someone that is incorrect/does not align with their gender identity.  Can occur when using pronouns, gendered language (i.e. “Hello ladies!”Hey guys”), or assigning genders to people without knowing how they identify (i.e. “Well, since we’re all women in this room, we understand…”).

 

Check out these listings for more information! The last one may surprise you!!


Cover Art A Murder over a Girl by Ken Corbett
Call Number: 364.152 C789m 2016
Publication Date: 2016
01/03/2019
Kaylee Horn

This month's showcase is on a manga and anime titled The Story of Saiunkoku by Sai Yukino.  

"Shurei enters the palace as Ryuki's consort, but he has yet to seek her out. It is rumored that men, not women, share the emperor's bedchamber. Shurei must think of a way to stop the emperor from shirking his responsibilities, but she has to find him first!"      -from the publisher

Check it out!

Cover Art The Story of Saiunkoku, Vol. 1 by Sai Yukino; Kairi Yura (Illustrator)
Call Number: 741.5 Y949s (Main Floor Circulation Area)
01/01/2019
Unknown Unknown

Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. was one of the most popular and effective leaders of the African American struggle for civil rights in the United States. His philosophy of nonviolent direct action galvanized thousands of Americans, both black and white, to press for granting the full measure of human and political rights to African Americans. Although he was not personally responsible for mobilizing protest, he was certainly one of the greatest organizers of people the world has ever seen. In the early twenty-first century, a national holiday is named in his honor, and numerous highways, streets, schools, playgrounds, and public buildings display his name.

 

Work Cited:

Moore, L. N. (2013). King, Martin Luther, Jr. (1929–1968). In T. Riggs (Ed.), St. James Encyclopedia of Popular Culture (2nd ed., Vol. 3, pp. 169-171). Detroit: St. James Press. Retrieved from https://link.galegroup.com/apps/doc/CX2735801488/GVRL?u=berea&sid=GVRL&xid=696bde43


Check out some of our book titles to get more information about Martin Luther King Jr. Day:

Cover Art Becoming King by Troy Jackson; Clayborne Carson (Introduction by)
Call Number: 323.092 K53zjac 2008 - Hutchins Library - Circulating (3rd Floor)
Publication Date: 2008-11-14
Cover Art King Remembered by Flip Schulke; Penelope O. McPhee; Rubenstein J Staff (Foreword by); Jesse Jackson (Foreword by)
Call Number: 323.409 K53zs 1986 - Carter G. Woodson Center--Alumni Bldg.
Publication Date: 1986-02-15
No Subjects