Douglass Day & University Libraries Event

Contributed by Professor Natalie Lau and Dr. Samah Faris K Alshrief

Happy Birthday, Fredrick Douglass! Please cordially accept this invitation to celebrate Fredrick Douglass’ birthday this Valentine’s Day. Although Douglass never knew his birth date, he chose to celebrate every year on February 14th. We celebrate this date as a moment for creating Black history together. Seton Hall University Libraries and Research Data Services is hosting the Douglass Day transcribe-a-thon as part of collective action to recognize Douglass’ contributions and activism. For more information about this event please consult the Seton Hall University Libraries Douglass Day Site and further details on additional celebrations can also be found via the official National Douglass Day Website.

We welcome you to our information center in the near future, but in the meantime if you need detailed help through the University Libraries. You can book a research appointment here: Research Appointment Site.

Women’s Network of Seton Hall – “Galentine’s Day” Event

Happy Valentine’s Day—or should we say, Galentine’s Day! ✨ Join the Women’s Network of Seton Hall THIS Thursday, February 13th at 5:30 p.m., in Jubilee Room 211 for a fun-filled celebration of friendship and self-love. Those in attendance will be writing love letters to themselves and their amazing friends, plus making the cutest keychains to take home!

It will be an event full of love, laughter, and creativity—you won’t want to miss it! Bring your besties (or just your fabulous self), and let’s make some memories together. We can’t wait to see you there! ❤️

Starting Your Research – Introductory & Interdisciplinary Databases

The Spring Semester has started and with the beginning of new information seeking adventures, the University Libraries offers several electronic-based tools to aid all of students and faculty with their respective research assignments. The Databases Page found under the “Find” links and icon located within the center toolbar.

Included among the most popular individual multi-disciplinary sites are: Academic Search Premier, Credo Reference, Global Issues in Context, LexisNexis Uni (formerly LexisNexis Academic), Opposing Viewpoints in Context (Gale), ProQuest Databases, and Statista: Insights and Facts Across 170 Industries and 150+ Countries.

We welcome you to our information center in the near future, but in the meantime if you need detailed help through the University Libraries. You can book a research appointment here: Research Appointment Site.

Book Launch – Roger Newman’s “Boys” & University Libraries

The University Libraries will host a book launch for Roger Newman, M.D., a specialist and member of the faculty at the Medical University of South Carolina. He is also a prolific novelist and distinguished alumnus of Seton Hall University.

His latest tome is entitled: “The Boys” which is a work of historical fiction that explores the relationship between two brothers from North Carolina who were raised on a dairy farm during the Great Depression era. They both join the military to fight in WWII but become estranged before reuniting in 1969 when unexpected circumstances bring them back together. Their respective lives are explored along with the bonds of fraternity and racial relations as one brother is White and the other is African American.

In addition to Boys, Roger Newman is the author of a series of medical thrillers: Occam’s RazorTwo Drifters, and What Becomes; and the historical fiction novel Will O’ the Wisp: Madness, War, and Recompense.

For more information on Roger Newman please consult his homepage for more information on his life and works.

This event will be co-sponsored by the University Libraries and the College of Human Development, Culture & Media will take place on Wednesday, February 5th from 1:00-2:30 p.m. in the Common Area located on the second floor of Walsh Library. Refreshments will be served.

We welcome you to our information center in the near future, but in the meantime if you need detailed help through the University Libraries. You can book a research appointment here: Research Appointment Site.

Banned & Censored Artists – An Exhibit

By Guest Author, Mairin Plant

As with books and other text-based materials, visual art has long been a popular target for censorship. Historically, both private groups and public leaders have leveraged their power to ban works of art from public view, alter their contents, or brand them as somehow harmful to spectators for political, social or religious reasons.

Some acts of censorship are directed at individual artworks by otherwise renowned artists. Michelangelo, to name one famous example, grappled with heavy restrictions and post hoc alterations while painting the Sistine Chapel, which inspired him to paint himself into the Last Judgement as St. Bartholomew’s flayed skin. Artists such as Franscisco de Goya, Gustav Klimt, and Pablo Picasso also encountered proscriptions during their careers and after their deaths.

Other censorship campaigns involve the elision of certain viewpoints altogether. In the 20th century, prohibition of abstract, expressionistic, or otherwise experimental art in favor of realistic painting and sculpture emerged as a prominent form of social control in the authoritarian regimes of the Soviet Union and Nazi Germany. Each of these regimes framed nonrepresentational art as a corrupting influence over the public and offensive to the presumed sensibilities of model citizens. The Nazi party specifically pointed to modernist art as evidence of a Jewish assault on German values.

In the 21st century, bans and censorship still proliferate. David Wojnarowicz, an artist who initially faced suppression in the 1980s when the National Endowment for the Arts (NEA) opted to pull funding from an exhibition focused on the ongoing AIDS epidemic, more recently censored when Smithsonian opted to remove several minutes of footage from a film installation in 2010—nearly 2 decades after the artist’s passing.

While art censorship can take on many different forms, discrete instances share themes. Art censorship is inherently elitest: it betrays a lack trust in the public to be able to contend with works of art responsibly or correctly on the part of authorities who seek to restrict what people are allowed to see and absorb.

Explore SHU Libraries through books on banned and censored artists on the second floor of the Walsh Library to learn more!

We welcome you to our information center in the near future, but in the meantime if you need detailed help through the University Libraries. You can book a research appointment here: Research Appointment Site.

Happy New Year & Technology Resource Information

As we move into 2025 our information professionals are looking to provide the best possible service and resources available to the Seton Hall community. The University Libraries also joins the rest of the United States in observing National Technology Day on January 6th. Equally, the embrace of technological advance is an everyday occurrence.

Counted among the numerous resources that we provide that go beyond traditional print resources includes our specialized homepage site entitled Accessibility Information for Major Library Databases.

We welcome you to our information center in the near future, but in the meantime if you need detailed help through the University Libraries. You can book a research appointment here: Research Appointment Site.

Multi-Language Education & The University Libraries

December is “Learn a Foreign Language” month within the United States and this provides our research community with the prime opportunity to explore different ways to connect more closely with the world at large. Popular dialects from Afrikaans to Zulu and others in-between are available for your discovery.

The University Libraries has various links to different language resources in order to aid your research efforts. This includes general  Books on Language, SHU Search – Introduction to Languages, along with Languages & Library Guides found on our homepage.

We welcome you to our information center in the near future, but in the meantime if you need detailed help through the University Libraries. You can book a research appointment here: Research Appointment Site.

University Libraries Podcast: “Statistics for the Behavioral Sciences,” With Kelly Goedert, Ph.D. and Susan Nolan, Ph.D.  

We are happy to announce the latest installment of the University Libraries podcast series entitled: Zet Forward. This podcast entitled: “Statistics For The Behavioral Sciences,” with guest scholars and co-editors: Kelly Goedert, Ph.D. and Susan Nolan, Ph.D.

This broadcast features Professor and Director of Undergraduate Studies for the Department of Psychology, Dr. Kelly Goedert, who has an extensive knowledge Cognitive Psychology and related subject matter. For more information on Dr. Goedert and her accomplishments visit her = professional homepage

Also featured is Professor Susan Nolan, who created earlier editions of this series (now in its sixth edition), originally with former co-author Thomas Heinzen, along with the most recent version discussed here. Dr. Nolan is a specialist in International Psychology Education and associated studies. More information on her accomplishments can be found via her =  professional homepage

Their collaboration yielded a full-length work that connects various expert perspectives into one well-developed volume. As their publisher noted that the content found within this book provides:

“. . . an introduction to statistics that engages behavioral science students with fascinating stories and real data drawn from the history of statistics and contemporary research. The authors support students and professors with market-leading coverage of visual displays of data, helpful mathematical and formula pedagogy, extensive practice exercises, Learning Curve adaptive quizzing, and immersive learning activities in Achieve (“Which Test Is Best?” And “Interpreting Statistical Results”). This new edition features updated information on open science practices and new “Statistics at Work” photo examples.”

You can find this podcast at: Podcast @ Seton Hall University.

Further details connected to this work can be found via the Worth Publishers, Macmillan Learning homepage. A physical volume of Statistics For The Behavioral Sciences (New York: Worth Publishers, Macmillan Learning, 2024) is ready for circulation and can be found within the Main Collection of the University Libraries, specifically within the Faculty Publications section (Call #: HA29 .N776 2024) located on the Second Floor of Walsh Library.

Zet Forward is a podcast to celebrate authors and other individuals who are involved with projects for the benefit of Seton Hall University and the wider world.  The series began in February of 2022.

For additional information please feel free to contact us via e-mail at the following University Libraries Address.

Universal Human Rights Month & University Libraries

Human Rights Month is celebrated across the globe in December. This commemoration is based on the landmark University Declaration of Human Rights created by the United Nations and ratified by their Draft Committee headed by Eleanor Roosevelt on 10 December 1948.

The University Libraries has several resources related to the Universal Declaration of Human Rights in various forms including our specially designed United Nations Library Guide along with Books on the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, SHU Search – Universal Declaration of Human Rights, and via the Universal Declaration of Human Rights Site.

We welcome you to our information center in the near future, but in the meantime if you need detailed help through the University Libraries. You can book a research appointment here: Research Appointment Site.

African American Catholic Exhibit & University Libraries

November is African American (Black) Catholic Month. In honor of this commemoration, the University Libraries has proudly created an exhibit featuring books, publication covers, and related materials in homage to the faithful.

In combination with the exhibit and an Introduction to Informational Resources on African American Catholicism, the University Libraries offers our research community print sources including starter sources that can be referred to via: African American Catholic Book Titles and African American Catholic Information Sources (SHU Search).

The display is situated on the second floor of Walsh Library. The exhibit will be available through of the semester.

For more information please visit and/or book a research appointment here.