Poster Session and Coffee Break
Sponsored by Antiquariat Inlibris-Gilhofer
Posters to be exhibited:
Diversity Stories: a StoryCorps Project, Curtis Small, University of Delaware; Béatrice Colastin Skokan, University of Miami
Searching for Scribbling Women: Hands-on Research in Book History with Women’s Studies Students, Maggie Kopp, Brigham Young University
How Does Every Picture Tell a Story? Through Metadata, Marina Morgan and Gerrianne Schaad, Florida Southern College
Zines in Public Schools: Youth, Classrooms, and Print Culture, Kathryn Heffner, University of Iowa
Prison Sentences: Recovering the Voices of Prisoners Through an Exhibit, Kim Bell, Queen’s University
“And You Shall Tell Your Children on that Day”: The Passover Haggadah and the Power of Participatory Storytelling in Special Collections Exhibits, Rebeka Bedard, Emory University
Herstory: Digitizing the WARM Journals, Heather Carroll, St. Catherine University and Sara Butterfass, St. Catherine University
Exhibiting a Holocaust Survivor’s Story through Partnerships and Resource Sharing, Alia Levar Wegner, University of South Florida
A Macabre Tale: Assessing the mood elicited by an exhibit on Renaissance Medicine, Meg Frost, Brigham Young University
Strange and Wonderful: Engaging the Challenges of Cataloging Artists’ Books to Improve Access, Beth Shoemaker, Emory University