Library Talk: Periodic Encounters. Everyday Treasures. Critical Reflections

September 10, 3:00pm - 4:00pm
Mānoa Campus, Hamilton Library #306

The Hawaiian Collection at the University of Hawaiʻi at Mānoa is the world’s most comprehensive research collection on the subject of Hawaiʻi.

The backbone of the collection is our vast and diverse holdings of those publications published periodically, commonly known as serials in libraries. Individually, these materials document the activities of their creators and the stories they tell. Collectively and historically, they reflect the communities they are a part of, which help us today draw new meanings and understandings on who we are, where we’ve been, and where we are going.

Join us to learn about the importance of serial publications and how they have documented the intricacies of everyday life in Hawaiʻi. Kapena Shim, Hawaiʻi specialist librarian, will present on the value of preserving serial publications and how they help us critically reflect on our past, present and future.

This talk is sponsored by the College of Arts and Humanities and Thomas Hale Hamilton Library.


Event Sponsor
Hamilton Library, Mānoa Campus

More Information
Yuma Totani, (808) 956-8564, yuma.totani@hawaii.edu, https://manoa.hawaii.edu/library/about/news/library-treasures/

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