Author Archives: Susan Abbott

Growing our Digital Collections

All E- Resources poster

In 2015 we have introduced a range of new digital materials as we continue to grow our digital collections.

New content is available across all disciplines and all content is available 24/7, worldwide.

New resources encompass ebooks, e-journals, online reference works and databases, news content, audiovisual materials, geographical datasets.

Our new resources include:
• FT.com – online version of the Financial Times newspaper and databases
• Loeb Classical Library (520+ full text volumes of Latin & Greek Literature)
• Psychology and Behavioural Sciences Collection (538 journals)
• Marine digimap online marine maps and datasets
• Henry Stewart Talks (850+ talks) (850+ audiovisual management and marketing lectures)
• Digital Theatre Plus (160 videos – filmed performances, documentaries and interviews)
• Oxford Handbooks Online (Archaeology 19 handbooks) (Law 12 handbooks)
• American Psychological Association ebooks collections, 2013 and 2014. (69 new e-books)
• Palgrave e-book collections: History (391 titles)/Literature (188 titles)/Media & Culture (188 titles)/Social Sciences(465 titles) (1232 titles in total!)
• Cambridge University Press Journals (349 journals)
• Oxford University Press Journals (286 journals)
• Taylor and Francis Journals (2011 journals)
• British Standards Online – full-text database of more than 50,000 British, European, International standards.
• i-law.com: full text maritime and commercial law database

Do dive in and explore. If you have any feedback on these new resources, please contact your Subject Librarian.

InterLibrary Loans Price Increase

Please be aware that the cost of InterLibrary Loans will rise from 1st August 2014 to £12.50 per ILL request and £6.00 per renewal. This is due to the rising cost of the service from the British Library.


Not sure what an InterLibrary Loan is ?

If an item is not available at Exeter University Library, you can request an Interlibrary Loan.  The Library will make the request on your behalf and will borrow books and journals from other libraries in the United Kingdom and from abroad.

Find out more on our website.

Access our e-journal collection from your tablet device with ease using Browzine

We are currently trialling a service called Browzine until the end of February.  This will allow you to easily search our online journals from your tablet.

To access, please download BrowZine from either the Google Play (Android Tablet) or Apple App Store (iPad) and search for “BrowZine”.  It is totally free software.

Then, select University of Exeter from the list and put in your university login and password.

Please note that you MUST use your Exeter “IT Credentials”.  We do not support the “check the box and put in the library card number & pin” option.

Then you should be able to browse our online journal collection with ease on your tablet, it allows you to:

  • Easily read complete scholarly journals in a format that is optimized for tablet devices
  • Create a personal bookshelf of favourite journals
  • Be alerted when new editions of journals are published
  • Easily save to Zotero, MendeleyDropbox and other services

Please note it is currently not compatible with mobile phones.

We’d love to know what you think of this service, is it easy to use, useful or not – so please send us your feedback to

Webinar : Using doctoral theses in your research: a guide to EThOS [13th Feb at 15:00]

EThOS (http://ethos.bl.uk) is the national database for PhD theses, managed by the British Library. It’s a fantastic resource for researchers, with over 100,000 UK theses freely available to download and use for your own research, and another 200,000 available to search and scan on demand.  

The British Library ran a free webinar (online presentation) about EThOS late last year, and by popular demand they’re doing another on 13 February at 15.00.

Join them for a free webinar to learn how EThOS works. Find out how to search for and download theses, and what to do if a thesis isn’t available. If you’re a PhD student, find out what will happen to your thesis once it’s completed. We’ll also explain how EThOS works with UK universities to support the whole research cycle, making the theses more visible and available for new researchers to use and build on.

This webinar is aimed at researchers, students, librarians and anyone who is interested in finding and using PhD theses. 

Host: Sara Gould, Development Manager at the British Library, who manages the EThOS service. Sara will answer questions after the webinar.

Register now to attend the webinar   https://attendee.gotowebinar.com/register/5974661878725146370

Please note this is a repeat of the Webinar in December 2013

Fantastic New and Very Moving Archive at the University

John Jarmain Archive (EUL MS 413)

The Special Collections team manage archives and rare books and has its own reading room in the Research Commons, Old Library.  We’re always keen to receive new deposits of archives and rare books, particularly relating to literature and west-country writers.

We’ve been incredibly fortunate to receive the archive of John Jarmain, a writer and poet who lived in Somerset and Dorset and was based in North Africa and Normandy during the Second World War.  Jarmain was killed in Normandy in 1944 but he had ensured the survival of his war poems by sending them home to his wife, Beryl, in a series of letters and airgraphs.   The poems were published posthumously.

Jarmain’s letters contain drafts of some of his best known war poems, together with references to his children, particularly his daughter, Janet Susan, who was born in August 1942 two years before Jarmain’s death.  However, Janet only discovered the cash of letters in which the original drafts were contained in 1990 after her mother’s death.  It took her ten years before she could bear to read them.   Last year, to coincide with the 60th anniversary of Jarmain’s death, they were re-published and the originals have now been donated by Janet to the University of Exeter.

The archive is currently being catalogued and digitized and some of the letters are already available for research.

We are hoping that the archive and Janet’s fascinating story will feature on BBC TV next week.  Look out for more blogs and library/Heritage collections tweets.

A Scan of the original  “For Alamein” by John Jarmain  in our new archive.

Forum Library ‘Highly Commended’ in National Awards

We’re very pleased to announce that the Forum Library has received the ‘Highly Commended’ award in the coveted SCONUL Building Design Award 2013.   

 The judges said:

 Citation for The Forum, Exeter University 

The award is made for a Library which, as an integral part of a larger development bringing together a range of student  support and retail services, has had a transformative effect on the campus creating a  ‘beating heart’ at its centre.

A flexible and technology-rich learning environment has been created with impressive sustainability and energy efficiency.  The inclusion of artworks plus careful thought to colour and design provides a pleasing visual experience and a creative buzz. 

Great care was taken throughout the development period and beyond to liaise with the student body which has voted with its feet by visiting in vastly increased numbers.  There is a definite feeling of student engagement and ownership, as one student said; ‘it makes learning fun again’

Michele Shoebridge, Deputy Chief Operating Officer and Director of Academic Services, commented:

           
‘This was a great outcome and we were up against stiff opposition’ 

Stephen Mossop, Head of Library Customer Services, commented: 

             ‘We’re delighted that the SCONUL judges considered the Forum Library worthy of such a prestigious award – but the judges we wanted to impress most are our customers, and we’re overjoyed that they clearly love it!’

FOLK GIG LINKS TO UNIVERSITY’S SPECIAL COLLECTIONS

On Wednesday 6 November 2013, the Arts & Culture Team in conjunction with the Heritage Collections Department are proud to present one of Devon’s, and indeed the UK’s finest contemporary folk singers, Jim Causley.   Accompanied by talented guitarist Lukas Drinkwater, Jim will be performing the wonderful songs he has composed to the words of the poems of his distant relative Charles Causley. 

As a special addition to this gig, which marks the 10th anniversary of Charles Causley’s death, copies of some of Charles Causley’s manuscripts of the poems Jim has set to music will be on display. Originals of these manuscripts are held in the University’s Special Collections.

The gig also provides an opportunity to experience one of the University’s newest music venues, Kay House Duryard, which is situated in Lower Argyll Road, off Cowley Bridge Road.  A bar will be open on the night.

Advance tickets are £10 (£8 for students). For more information about the gig and to book tickets, click here.

FORUM SERIES TALKS

This Autumn sees the start of the Arts & Culture Team’s Forum Series talks, in the stunning Alumni Auditorium.

Our first speaker will be the award-winning author Hilary Mantel.  After the huge success of her visit here last year, Hilary will be returning on the evening of Tuesday 29 October to speak about the writer’s task of breaking down, in imagination, the barrier between the living and the dead.  She will reflect on history, heritage and fiction, on memory and myth.

Our second speaker is ‘whispering’ Bob Harris, the legendary DJ and broadcaster who made his name presenting BBC2’s seminal rock programme, The Old Grey Whistle Test , was Co-founder of Time Out Magazine and is current host of BBC Radio 2’s Bob Harris Country which focuses on country, roots and Americana music.  On the evening of Tuesday 26 November, Bob will talk about his varied and exciting career in the world of music and broadcasting.

Tickets are £5 for each talk (£3 for students) and can be purchased from the Exeter Northcott Box Office, either in person, by telephone, on 01392 493493, or online via the University’s Arts & Culture website, where more information about the events can also be found.

Bookable PGR Study Desks in Research Commons

What are they?

These are large desks with associated lockers, which can be booked by Postgraduate Research Students from any college.

Where are they?

In the Main Reading Room of Research Commons. This is a silent study area.

When are they available?

During Research Commons opening hours. Check here for the current opening hours.

http://as.exeter.ac.uk/library/usingthelibrary/opening/researchcommons/

How do I book?

Book a desk in advance at:

https://roombookings.exeter.ac.uk/pgr2013wrb

A desk can be booked for 1 day or for up to 5 consecutive days. Collect your locker key from the Research Commons Reception Desk by 10.00 (weekdays) or 11.00 (weekends). If arriving after these times, please confirm that you still need the desk by phoning or emailing Research Commons.

Any questions?

Please contact library staff at the Research Commons Reception Desk (01392 724052) or email