Very grateful to the librarians @EmoryRoseMARBL for help with archive exploration that resulted in "A Good Mother Is Hard to Find" in @GeorgiaReview https://t.co/rMZLYLP1TY
This colorful cover to the magazine Shojo Sekai (Girl’s World) is typical of the girls magazines that were popular during the early 20th century.
https://t.co/ZKCWdXRcF0
You never know what will jump out at you at Rose! 😱 While pulling boxes, a staff member saw a hand in a nearby box. 🖐️ Turns out, the hand belonged to a doll in our Bram Stoker collection, which includes memorabilia related to vampires & (apparently) other horrific creatures! 🐺
Announcing the Summer 2025 issue of The Georgia Review, featuring new work by Myronn Hardy, Erin Slaughter, Jess X Snow, Chris Crowder, Orlando Ricardo Menes, Asher Hartman, along with new translations of Ainur Karim and Hafsah Mujalli, and art by Nadezda Nikolova .
My book @LivingWithJaneAusten , part memoir/part investigation of how we relate to Austen and her marvellous novels at every stage of life, is coming out in March. Am thrilled it now has a cover. Thank you Cambridge UP!
吉田 喜重 - Yoshishige Yoshida. In Memoriam: Several Japanese websites report the death of the film director 吉田 喜重 (Yoshishige Yoshida) (1933-2022) (also known as Kijû Yoshida). He was one of the enfants terribles (with Nagisa Oshima, Shohei Imamura,… https://t.co/BhTh91TVAs
Tarez Graban, Ph.D. at the Department of English, edited the collection “Teaching Through the Archives: Text, Collaboration, and Activism” with the Southern Illinois University Press. Congratulations on this achievement!
Kudos to @floridastate Assistant Professor Lindsey Eckert on publication of her first book, The Limits of Familiarity, which "encourages us to reflect in our own fraught historical moment on the distinction between telling all and telling all too much." 👏 https://t.co/9rncndV0H5
Looking forward to the "Binding Together, Pulling Apart" panel #NewRom22, @LindsEckert, @emilyrohrbach1, and @kaciewills (1:30 pm Liverpool/8:30 am Tallahassee).
Lindsey Eckert, Ph.D. at the Department of English, received a four-month Huntington Library Fellowship and residency to analyze 19th-century British bookbinding trends. Congratulations on this achievement!