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Advocating for justice and understanding

When you ask Thembelihle (Thembie) Moyo who she is, she’ll tell you she identifies as a mother of two beautiful daughters first and as a creative writer second. These dual identities complement how she approaches her work. feed

Lii Michif Niiyanaan: We Are Métis launched

On Nov. 16, the First Peoples House came alive with the vibrant spirit of celebration as Indigenous students, staff, faculty, Elders and community members gathered for a special event – the screening of the documentary film, Lii Michif Niiyanaan: We Are Métis. feed

Métis voices speaking their truth

Media release

The Métis are often referred to as Canada’s “invisible people” – the “ghosts of the land” – whose stories haunt the country’s collective unconscious. Lii Michif Niiyanaan: We Are Métis is a one-hour documentary that addresses this invisibility by shining a new light on the historical and contemporary experience of Métis people in Canada and providing a space for Métis people to share their diverse perspectives on what it means to be Métis today. feed

McCue lecture to reflect on reconciliation

Anishinaabe journalist Duncan McCue will draw on his award-winning podcast for a thoughtful reflection on building respectful relationships with Indigenous communities and how Canadians can take meaningful steps toward reconciliation. feed

Royal Society of Canada 2023

The Royal Society of Canada (RSC) is celebrating 10 University of Victoria researchers—the most ever at one time—with the country’s highest academic honour. feed

Twins win bookend pair of Victoria Medals

The Ring

Rachel and Sarah Lachmansingh have both been named winners of the Victoria Medal, the first time this annual award for Faculty of Fine Arts graduates has been presented to two people. feed

UVic a global impact leader

Media release

UVic is 1st in Canada for climate action and in the global top 10 for impact, according to the 2023 Times Higher Education Impact Rankings. THE scores universities and colleges for how they are responding to UN goals to end poverty, protect the planet and ensure peace and prosperity. feed

CIFAL anniversary

In a single year since its inception, CIFAL Victoria, the United Nations-accredited training centre at UVic, has created a variety of courses, trained community leaders in Africa, partnered with BC First Nations, as well as a Swedish group that prom…

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Pop-up exhibit: Raging Grannies

In February 2024, the Diana M. Priestly Law Library unveiled a new display that showcases the background, history, and accomplishments of the Raging Grannies nationwide and includes artifacts from the University of Victoria’s Special Collections & University Archives.

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In conversation with librarian Evelyn Feldman

My work involves talking to publishers about our renewals, making sure we receive and pay our invoices, ensuring that you're able to find and access electronic resources in our collections, and perhaps most importantly, making decisions to ensure the library collections have what they need to best support UVic's many academic programs.

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Internship reflection

One of the benefits of this position was how it allowed me to learn about so many facets of the library, from Special Collections to the Centre for Academic Communication to the Digital Scholarship Commons and everything in between. I’ve made so many connections across departments, and the staff at the Libraries have made every day a joy. I feel so fortunate for this opportunity and for all the wonderful people I’ve met along the way.

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In conversation with librarian Sarah Miller

No two days are ever the same. Most days involve helping students – answering questions over email or having appointments and drop-ins. Depending on the day, I will work on answering questions over email and preparing for student appointments.

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In conversation with librarian Caitlin Keenan

My job is to make sense of all of the interconnections between those different platforms and resources and help shepherd us towards a consistent and comprehensible web presence that helps students and other library users find what they’re looking for easily and efficiently.

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With In the With Out exhibit

With In the With Out is an art exhibition by BIPOC artists that examines how aspects of their personhood interact with the larger world.

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The work of artist Lynda Gammon

Using her meditative practice as a base from which to frame this exhibit, Gammon guides us behind-the-scenes to that space between the walls, in the collections' vaults, where women's artworks endure. Captured by partially blurred and obscured black and white photographs, Gammon's self-portraits encourage us to not only consider the passage of time and space, but both the presence and absence of women artists in archives and art historical collections.

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A new interactive art installation

The Untitled ṮEṮÁĆES map, the first produced haptic map prototype, was co-created by UVic student Kim Shortreed and W̱SÁNEĆ/Lekwungen artist TEMOSEṈ Chazz Elliott for Shortreed’s PhD project, "Contracolonial Practices in Salish Sea Namescapes."

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Making our waste visible and knowledge mobilization

Learn about waste challenges, management, solutions and the work of informal waste workers with workshops and an exhibit.

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Book Arts Lab

The newly established teaching space provides hands-on, dynamic learning opportunities with contemporary and historical book arts equipment, and information technologies more broadly.

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Spend Valentine's Day with us!

Join UVic Libraries for a free, drop-in event on February 14, 2024 and make a Valentine's card for your crush!

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Explore the world of student podcasts

The University of Victoria Libraries student podcast award is intended to recognize and celebrate the high-quality work being created by UVic students in the world of podcasting. The contest is meant to highlight and demonstrate the ways students are living UVic’s values of “engaged learning and real-life involvement to contribute to a better future for people and the planet.”

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2023 library scholarship recipients

The University of Victoria Libraries is proud to be an essential and integral part of the research life cycle at UVic. Our awards and fellowships recognize and honor the contributions and achievements of all our students, enhancing the sense of personal growth and accomplishment in our academic community.

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Oluna Ceska and Adolf Ceska Collection

The Oluna Ceska and Adolf Ceska Collection is comprised of botanical illustrations and scientific illustrations by Oldriska (Oluna) Ceska (1938-2022).

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In conversation with librarian Courtney Lundrigan

As for a typical day, one of my favourite things about being a librarian is that it’s rare for a day to be ‘typical.’ The variety of projects and responsibilities was one of the selling points for me in working in libraries. Since arriving at UVic, I’ve been into everything from participating in Thunderfest, teaching first-year classes, planning events, and supporting projects that have us engaging directly with students.

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In memoriam: Dr. Joyce Clearihue

In September 2019, former Dean of Law Susan Breau announced a donation to the law school and the law library by Dr Joyce Clearihue in the amount of $434,000 to assist in establishing the Indigenous law collection.

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Broken Promises exhibit

The capstone of the Landscapes of Injustice project’s seven year multi-institutional, community engaged research, Broken Promises puts names and faces to a dark chapter of Canadian history. It is a reminder of the power of racism, the many Canadians who were complicit in this injustice, and the legacies of dispossession that persist to this day. The exhibit is open to the public, and free to visit.

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Remembering Telidon

Once thought to have been lost forever, these early examples of networked, interactive digital art and the computing hardware and software required to view them, were painstakingly restored by University of Victoria Librarian John Durno over a period of several years.

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Gallery exhibit: Salvage

Salvage is a collection of driftwood books salvaged from the beaches of Vancouver Island and the Cascadia bioregion of the Pacific Northwest. Collected over a ten-year period, they have not been altered in any way, and suggest through their height, weight, width, depth and shape the conceptual idea and physical embodiment of the codex.

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Survivor-led repatriation art project

This repatriation project was funded by a Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council Partnership Engage Grant held by the MRSGI membership, Dr. Andrea Walsh (Anthropology), and Ms. Lorilee Wastasecoot (Indigenous Curator of Collections and Engagement, Legacy Art Galleries). Repatriation work was carried out in collaboration with Maureen Matthews at the Museum of Manitoba. Funding for the production of the banners was received through Canadian Heritage.

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