Archive for 2008
Wednesday, December 3, 2008
Novelist ZZ Packer will give a reading at 7:30 p.m., Dec. 4 in Avaya Auditorium (ACES 2.302). Packer is visiting professor of fiction at the Michener Center for Writers this fall.
Packer burst onto the national literary scene in 2000 when her story “Drinking Coffee Elsewhere” debuted in The New Yorker. A collection by the same title was published to much acclaim in 2003, and was a finalist for the PEN/Faulkner Award.
“This is the old-time religion of storytelling,” wrote The New
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Tags: Best Young American Novelists, Drinking Coffee Elsewhere, Michener Center for Writers, ZZ Packer
By Marla Akin, Michener Center for Writers
Published at 9:12 AM |
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Tuesday, December 2, 2008
The Harry Ransom Center presents the free Poetry on the Plaza event “Winter Landscapes” this Wednesday, Dec. 3, at noon.
Find relief from an unseasonably warm December with poetry that evokes winter weather.
Hear poetry by E. E. Cummings, Robert Lowell and Anne Sexton from the center’s manuscript collections, and winter classics by Emily Dickinson, James Russell Lowell, John Greenleaf Wittier and Robert Frost from the center’s rare book collection.
Readers include Brian Cassidy, guitarist and multi-instrumentalist for Okkervil River and graduate of the
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Tags: Brian Cassidy, Harry Ransom Center, Poetry on the Plaza, Steven Hoelscher, Winter Landscapes
By Alicia Dietrich, Harry Ransom Center
Published at 8:58 AM |
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Monday, December 1, 2008
Did you know the first person to play the role of Tinker Bell in live performances at Disneyland was a 70-year-old Hungarian Jewish immigrant burlesque dancer?
Dangling from a harness attached to a wire at the top of the 146-foot Matterhorn, the 4-foot-10-inch woman slid 784 feet to Sleeping Beauty’s castle, where she initiated the park’s nightly fireworks display.
This remarkably agile woman was Tiny Kline, and her life story provides a fascinating window into U.S. popular culture during the 20th century,
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Tags: Circus Queen & Tinker Bell, College of Liberal Arts, Department of American Studies, Janet Davis, Tiny Kline
By The Admin, Systems Analyst
Published at 8:39 AM |
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Wednesday, November 26, 2008
Do your books, knick-knacks, music and wall décor reveal the essential makeup of your character? University of Texas at Austin psychologist Sam Gosling, who has studied the psychology of personal space for more than 10 years, says they do.
In his new book “Snoop: What Your Stuff Says About You” (Basic Books, 2008), Gosling reveals some of the key findings from his research, a special brand of voyeurism he calls “snoopology.”
Smithsonian Magazine recently wrote about Gosling’s work in the Oct.
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Tags: College of Liberal Arts, Department of Psychology, Sam Gosling, Smithsonian Magazine, Snoop: What Your Stuff Says About You, snoopology
By The Admin, Systems Analyst
Published at 12:22 PM |
12 Comments
Wednesday, November 26, 2008
Although staff at UT Libraries don’t expect to see the death of the book in its traditional printed form anytime soon, they aren’t taking any chances. Staff members are constantly seeking new ways to integrate technology with long-standing library practices.
One new feature recently launched by the libraries is Longhorn Reviews, a Web 2.0 tool for the Library Catalog that allows users to submit reviews of titles housed at the university.
Matt Lisle, libraries information analyst and Longhorn Reviews project member, says user-generated
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Tags: catalog, Longhorn Reviews, University of Texas Libraries, user-generated content, Web 2.0, widgets
By Travis Willmann, University of Texas Libraries
Published at 8:57 AM |
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Tuesday, November 25, 2008
Three years ago, The New York Times tapped the expertise of regulatory law expert Thomas McGarity, professor in the School of Law at UT, for a story about the Bush Administration’s quiet strategy to limit lawsuits against product manufacturers by asserting the power of federal regulatory agencies.
The story eventually led McGarity to write “The Preemption War: When Federal Bureaucracies Trump Local Juries” (Yale University Press, 2008) about the decade-long preemption war in the courts, federal agencies and Congress—an issue he’d worked
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Tags: Center for Progressive Reform, School of Law, The Preemption War, Thomas McGarity, U.S. Supreme Court
By Laura Castro, School of Law
Published at 11:52 AM |
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Monday, November 24, 2008
Michener Center graduate Brendan Short (MFA ‘05) will be at BookPeople this Tuesday, Nov. 25 at 7 p.m. to read from his debut novel, “Dream City” (MacAdam/Cage, 2008).
Set in Depression-era Chicago, “Dream City” tells the story of a young boy’s obsession with comic book heroes, and his life-long attempt to recapture the innocence of his childhood.
Library Journal called the novel “an impressively mature first effort..complex and compelling…Highly recommended” in its Aug. 15 review. Check out more reviews of “Dream City” at
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Tags: BookPeople, Brendan Short, Dream City, Library Journal, Michener Center for Writers
By The Admin, Systems Analyst
Published at 8:39 AM |
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Friday, November 21, 2008
Bibliophiles may spend a lot of time thinking about writing, but that generally means the writing we see as we flip the pages of a book, not going back to the clay tablets and artifacts found in the ancient Near East.
To understand those beginning forms of written communication, there is no better source than Denise Schmandt-Besserat, professor emerita in the Departments of Art and Art History and Middle Eastern Studies.
Schmandt-Besserat is credited with discovering the origins of writing. Her most
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Tags: Carlton Erickson, College of Liberal Arts, Denise Schmandt-Besserat, Hamilton Book Awards, James Loehlin, John Markert, Kurt Weyland, University of Texas Press, When Writing Met Art
By Vive Griffith, Humanities Institute
Published at 8:40 AM |
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Thursday, November 20, 2008
November is a time of year when popular culture often revisits stereotypes about American Indians via mythologized depictions of the first thanksgiving in the New World. However, the historical facts don’t always match the picture painted in elementary school celebrations.
Scholars at The University of Texas at Austin whose research overturns these stereotypes include Steven Hoelscher, chair of the Department of American Studies, and Erika Bsumek, assistant professor of history.
Both of these faculty members have new books out this fall
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Tags: American Indian; Native American, College of Liberal Arts, Department of American Studies, Erika Bsumek, Ho-Chunk Nation, Indian-Made, James Cox, Pauline Turner Strong, Picturing Indians, Steven Hoelscher, Thanksgiving
By The Admin, Systems Analyst
Published at 8:35 AM |
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Wednesday, November 19, 2008
Imagine a world where ungodly temperatures create a hell on Earth for mankind. This heat leads to a frightening evolution of living things.
Animals grow at astronomical rates; monstrous creatures roam the Earth. The power of photosynthesis rises to new heights. Giant plant-life towers to the skies and challenges the agricultural industry. The city of Dallas becomes so polluted that humans must live underground where they can escape the mighty beasts.
This is the scenario in University of Texas at Austin
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Tags: College of Communication, Global WarNing, Perla Sarabia Johnson, School of Journalism, Science Fiction
By Erin Geisler, College of Communication
Published at 12:28 PM |
2 Comments