Finding and using China-related library resources

FO_China

Are you curious about China? Do you need to find relevant resources but don’t quite now where to start? Are you looking for primary sources?

If any of these questions have popped up, please come along on Friday, 7 November, 10.00am-12.00pm to the First Floor of the Main Library for our Pop-up Library session!

Picture5We will tell you all about both Western and Chinese language materials available through the Library. We will show you how to use our different databases on China, which contain both English materials (for example, British Foreign Office Files on China, Chinese laws, etc) and Chinese sources (classics, e-books, newspapers, journal articles, etc).

Whether you are just curious about China or need some help with a specific research question: we are there to help, so please ‘pop up’ to the First Floor on Friday!

Engage: #LibraryPop

Finding Data

DataLibrary

The Data Library team want to help you find data sources for your studies and your research. Pop up to the Pop Up Library this Tuesday between 10am and 12 noon, and tell us what data you’re working with, ask us any questions you have about finding and using data and we’ll do our best to help.
Pauline Ward is a Data Library Assistant at the University of Edinburgh
See the Data Library’s online Catalogue for more information.

@PaulineDataWard

A Picture of Health

On Thursday 30th October from 10am, Louise and Clair from Lothian Health Services Archive (LHSA) will be on the Library Pop desk on the first floor of the Main Library. LHSA is one of the largest medical archives in the UK, holding everything from institutional records of Edinburgh’s hospitals to small personal collections from those who worked inside them.

Including registers and minutes, plans, photographs, objects, audio-visual media and more, our archive documents the history of healthcare in Edinburgh and the Lothians over more than four hundred years (our earliest holding dates from 1594). Our collections trace the social, political, economic and (of course) medical history of our city and are widely used by the general public, students and academics. Our most popular resources come from our Royal Edinburgh Hospital (REH) collections, a psychiatric hospital (‘asylum’) that has just celebrated its bicentenary. Ranging from admission registers to patient letters, artwork and case books, the good recordkeeping of the hospital has led to a wealth of unique sources for students, academics and family historians exploring patient experiences in the nineteenth century.

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Artwork by Royal Edinburgh Hospital patient, John Willis Mason, c. 1890s (GD16).

On Thursday, we’ll be focussing on our image collections. As Clair has been cataloguing LHSA’s considerable collection of photographs, she has put together a slideshow of some of her favourites:

RIE, Ward 10, 1895

Royal Infirmary of Edinburgh Ward, 1895 (P/PL1)

We’ll also be remembering the centenary of the First World War in our display by bringing along a number of collection items. For example, you will be able to see a rare wartime photo album from the Edenhall Hospital for Limbless Soldiers and Sailors (based near Musselburgh) and a scrapbook from nurse Ethel Miller. Nurse Miller worked in the 2nd Scottish General Hospital Craigleith, where she decided to pass around a book amongst her soldier patients to record their memories, verses and sketches. The scrapbook is a real favourite with LHSA staff, and in autumn last year we produced a replica copy that is used in education work:

Acc.12.020.92

Page from the scrapbook of Nurse Ethel Miller, c. 1917 (Acc12/20)

So come and see us on Thursday from 10am and we can let you know how LHSA can help you, from historical research to sources for projects and finding your own Edinburgh family history.

Louise Williams, LHSA Archivist

 

Dolly Pops Up…

keep-calm-and-draw-me-a-sheep-3

Did you know that Edinburgh has been a world leader in genetics for over a century? And that there’s definitely more to cloning than just Dolly the sheep? Come to the Pop-Up Library on the first floor of the Main Library between 10 and 12 tomorrow (28th) to learn about the fascinating animal genetics collections revealed by the Towards Dolly project, and have some fun while you’re at it. Don’t miss the chance to win some fabulous prizes (including ‘Dolly’ Mixtures, naturally). And yes, there will be a sheep drawing contest.

Don’t be a drone, be a clone – see you there!

Clare Button, Project Archivist, ‘Towards Dolly: Edinburgh, Roslin and the Birth of Modern Genetics’

What’s on: 27th- 31st October

#LibraryPop

Drop in sessions -1st Floor Main Library

27th October- 31st October

AM PM
Get the Best of the Library Week- Meet your Academic Support Librarian
Monday Metadata games(Tag image collections) 2-3pm Divinity, History, Classics & Archaeology3-4pm Politics & International Relations, Economics
Tuesday Towards Dolly(Documenting the birth of modern genetics) 2-3pm Literatures, Languages and Cultures3-4pm Business School, Informatics
Wednesday Session cancelled 🙁 2-3pm Design, History of Art, Architecture, Music, Law3-4pm Medicine
Thursday Lothian Health Service Archive 2-3pm Sociology, Social Work, Social Policy, Education3-4pm Psychology, Philosophy, Language Sciences, Research Methods
Friday Zombie Apocalypse –Accessing resources off campus(ResourceLists@Edinburgh) 2-3pm Health in Social Science3-4pm Chemistry, Physics, Maths

 

What’s on 13th-17th October

#LibraryPop

Drop in sessions -1st Floor Main Library

13th October- 17th October

AM PM
Monday Digital Footprint – managing your digital footprint Pebblepad for reflection (2-3pm only)
Tuesday Musical Instrument Museum Collections Meet Laura Shanahan (Head of Collections Development and Access)
Wednesday Smart Searching with Searcher Be in charge of the Library for the day!
Thursday Box of Broadcasts (BoB) – what is it? How to use it? Volunteering and Development with the Library
Friday Your references: get it right first time Survey: Course Collections Review

 

Rare Books De-mystified

If you have ever fancied using old or rare books as the basis of a project, or come upon the location “Main Library – Special Collections” in the catalogue, for something you wanted, and not known what to do next, the Library Pop-Up session on Thursday 9th October, 2 – 4pm is for you.
The library has about 400,000 rare books, ranging in date from manuscript books from the eleventh century through early printing from all parts of the world, to modern limited DSCN3413 DSCN3415

editions and books with notes and annotations by scholars and scientists.
Come and see a small selection, showing the sort of thing we have, discover how to find out about them and get access to them. There will be a few you can handle, and Beth and Fiona, our Rare Books Cataloguing Interns will be running tutorials on how to handle them properly.

Timetable: 6th-10th October

#LibraryPop

Drop in sessions -1st Floor Main Library

6th October- 10th October

AM PM
Monday Finding/using Chinese library resources Getting full text journal articles – fast!
Tuesday
Edinburgh College of Art Archives
Resources Plus: How do I get hold of the book I need?
Wednesday
Pebblepad for reflection
Discover Special Collections from New College Library
Thursday Smart Searching with Searcher Rare Book Collections
Friday
Copyright- all you need to know
Meet Joe Marshall (Head of Special Collections) and Jacky MacBeath (Head of Museums)

 

Finding and using China-related library resources

FO_China

Are you curious about China? Do you need to find relevant resources but don’t quite now where to start? Are you looking for primary sources?

If any of these questions have popped up, please come along on Monday, 6 October, 10-12pm to the First Floor of the Main Library for our Pop-up Library session!

Picture5We will tell you all about both Western and Chinese language materials available through the Library. We will show you how to use our different databases on China, which contain both English materials (for example, British Foreign Office Files on China, Chinese laws, etc) and Chinese sources (classics, e-books, newspapers, journal articles, etc).

Whether you are just curious about China or need some help with a specific research question: we are there to help, so please ‘pop up’ to the First Floor on Monday!

Engage: #LibraryPop

Paper Conservation – techniques and tricks

Interested in learning more about conservation activity at the University? Come along to our Pop-Up Library Session at the Main Library tomorrow, Tuesday 30th at 10am and take the opportunity to talk to Emma (Conservation Officer) and Ruth (LHSA Manager) about their work at the University and the techniques involved in conserving and caring for our many collections.

Based in our studio within the Centre for Research Collections, our remit is to guide and support conservation and preservation activity across the many and diverse rare and unique collections held by the University. This work can include undertaking practical conservation treatment of paper-based items, as well as the preventive care of the wider collections.

We hope to see you tomorrow. There may even be the chance to have a go at some conservation techniques yourselves….

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