Tag Archives: Lilly Library at Bishop’s House

From Lilly to Bishop’s House – A Student Spotlight

From Lilly Library to the Bishop’s House

Lilly – and Bishop’s House – Student Yaa

A Part of Lilly’s Past, Present, and Future!

For many years, Lilly Library served as the heart of East Campus and our student assistants have been an essential element in maintaining a high level of service and engagement with our community. When Lilly closed in May 2024 for a major renovation and expansion, staff and services relocated to Bishop’s House for the duration of the project. Closing for the renovation deeply involved our student workers as books had to be inventoried, circulating books required constant re-shelving, all while maintaining normal operations. A new schedule and range of services in Bishop’s House may require fewer student assistants, but we are fortunate that one “Lilly veteran” Yaa decided to join us back on East Campus. Yaa began working with us during her first year and has the distinction of working in the “old” Lilly as well as in Bishop’s House! Her support of Duke Libraries includes serving on student advisory boards since she arrived on campus.

Getting to Know Yaa

Student in library stacks
In her favorite spot in Lilly – by the window on the third level stacks
  • Hometown: Jacksonville, Florida
  • Family/siblings/pets: Mom, Dad, an older brother and a younger brother
  • Academic major: Spanish with a Journalism minor
  •  Favorite on-campus activity (besides working in the library 😉): Walking through Duke Gardens
  • Favorite off-campus activity:
    Trying out restaurants with friends!
  • Favorite campus eatery: Ginger + Soy
  • Favorite off-campus eatery: Naan Stop

Remembering your Lilly experience:

Q: What was your favorite place in Lilly Library – and why?
A: The third-floor window because the sunset was always a beautiful sight. The photo shows me there, looking into the afternoon sun.
Note: this was also our senior Karen‘s favorite spot.

Yaa’s most interesting find in Lilly

Q: What’s the strangest/most interesting book or movie or music you’ve come across in the library?
A: I found this sci-fi graphic novel that was about a Messiah. It was basically a Jesus story but without the religion. It was veryyy interesting, so I took a photo.

Q: What is one memory from your time in the library that you will never forget?
A: How fun it always was to deliver books to faculty offices all over East Campus.

Q: What is the craziest thing you’ve ever done in the library?
A: Maybe seeing if I could fit in the dumbwaiter or running from the 4th floor down to the 1st.

Q: What is your favorite part about working at the library? Least favorite?
A: My favorite part would be all of the enriching and fun conversations I’ve had over the years with the librarians and staff. My least favorite thing would be the creepy pipe noises in Bishop’s House.

Q: How will your time working in the library help you in your future pursuits?
A: My time at the library helped me with organizational skills and people skills and these are two things that transfer over to any aspect of life.

Celebrating at the Lilly Renovation Kickoff

The end of classes in May means all of us at Lilly Library say “cuídate mucho, hasta luego” to Yaa, who will be studying in South America in the fall semester. However, she promises to return in the spring of 2026  as a treasured member of our East Campus Libraries “family”.

Stay tuned!

Class of 2025: What is a Vital Lilly Library Resource?

What is a Vital Lilly Library Resource?
Our Student Assistants!

Young woman holding camera
Away from Lilly Library – Chronicle News Photo Editor Karen on Chapel Drive

 Lilly Class of 2025

For many years, Lilly Library served as the heart of East Campus and our student assistants have been an essential element in maintaining a high level of service and engagement with our community. When Lilly closed in May 2024 for a major renovation and expansion, staff and services relocated to Bishop’s House for the duration of the project. Closing for the renovation deeply involved our student workers as books had to be inventoried,  circulating books required constant reshelving, all while maintaining normal operations. A new schedule and range of services in Bishop’s House may require fewer student assistants, but we are fortunate that our “Lilly veteran” Karen decided to return (sometimes on her trademark pink scooter!) and work with us on East Campus.  Karen began working with us during her first year and we celebrate her now as our own Lilly Class of 2025, our “honors graduate”!

Meet Duke – and Lilly! – Senior Karen

Sculpture with student
Getting ready for renovation – Karen says bye to the Ben Duke bust [Instagram LillyLibDuke]
  • Hometown: Chantilly, VA
  • Family/siblings/pets: A younger brother named Jason.
  • Academic major: Public Policy
  • Activities on campus: Favorite on-campus activity (besides working in the library 😉)
  • Duke Marching and Pep Band, The Chronicle
  • Favorite off-campus activity: Trying new restaurants or hiking.
  • Favorite campus eatery: Marketplace
  • Favorite off-campus eatery: M Sushi

From Lilly Library to Bishop’s House –
what a long, strange road it’s been!

Q: What was your favorite place in Lilly Library – and why?
A: Third floor stacks, by the big window overlooking the tennis courts because it was peaceful, and I love sitting in the sun.

Q: What’s the strangest/most interesting book or movie or music you’ve come across in the library?
A: N7359.M67 A4 2003
And, yes, we had to look this up – it is a book  with the title Wave UFO, featuring the art of Mariko Mori.

Q: What is one memory from your time in the library that you will never forget?
A: When my coworker Katherine and I got hungry during one of our closing shifts together, so we ordered GoBringIt to the library!

Q: What is the craziest thing you’ve ever done in the library?
A: Cried  Oh no, this makes us sad!

Q: What is your favorite part about working at the library? Least favorite?
A: Walking around East Campus on a beautiful day doing faculty deliveries; running to catch the last C1 during closing shifts

Q: How will your time working in the library help you in your future pursuits?
A: Working at a library sharpens your people skills and makes you more detail-oriented

duke student band
Karen bringing the “pep” in the Pep Band

Finally…
Q: What will you miss most about the library when you graduate?
A: All the full-time staff who have become like a family to me. Shout out to Nate, Kelley, Danette, Lee, Carson, David, Lauren, Carol, Greta and Ira ☹
Thank you and we will miss Karen, too! We look forward to her visiting the renovated Lilly Library at her class reunion!

Q: What are your plans for after graduation?
A: Still figuring it out

Graduation in May means Lilly Library will say farewell to Karen, a treasured member of our East Campus Libraries “family”. We appreciate Karen’s stellar work and dedication to Lilly and wish her all the best!

Hispanic Voices from our Collections: Part 2

Fall 2024 brings exciting changes to East Campus Libraries.  Lilly Library is undergoing a major renovation and expansion and, as many of you know, our staff and services have moved to the Bishop’s House. Our first collection spotlight of the year features books and films that celebrate Hispanic creators and stories.  This post, the second of two, highlights movies. Check out our selection of books too. Come to East Campus, explore the Collection Spotlight, and say hello to Lilly staff in our new digs!

FILMS

 Chicano Cinema and Media Art Series

This series showcases important and rare Chicano films and videos. Included in the collection are feature-length films and artists’ videos. Many of these works have been restored and the originals archived in the CSRC Library’s special collections at UCLA.

DVD cover, Frontierlandia


Fronterilandia = Frontierland: the border in the popular imagination of the U.S. and Mexico
(dir. Jesse Lerner, 2005)
Fronterilandi examines multiple points of cultural contact between the United States and Mexico. From Santa Barbara’s Fiestas, and South Carolina’s kitschy “South of the Border” tourist complex, to a Mexican Beatles cover band and Chicano rap, this film reveals the Borderlands as a laboratory of hybridity that continues to ignite the popular imagination of each nation. Working at the boundaries of experimental film and documentary travelogue, this film weaves together found footage, interviews, performance art, and music video, producing a masterful commentary that is at once poetic, disturbing and hilarious.

More titles in the series:
Laura Aguilar : life, the body, her perspective
Casa Libre = Freedom House
Film/video works by Willie Varela
Los Four ; Murals of Aztlán : the street painters of East Los Angeles
Harry Gamboa Jr. : early video art
Harry Gamboa Jr. : 1990s video art
No Movie
Please, don’t bury me alive! = ¡Por favor, no me entierren vivo!
Run, Tecato, run

Biopics

DVD cover Frida

Frida (dir. Julie Taymor, 2002)
Salma Hayek’s Oscar-nominated performance drives this fascinating biopic about Mexican surrealist Frida Kahlo and her fiery marriage to fellow painter Diego Rivera (Alfred Molina). The imaginative film also chronicles her political activism and the bus accident that left her in pain for the rest of her life. Geoffrey Rush, Ashley Judd, Antonio Banderas, Edward Norton.

More biopics:
Before Night Falls
Cesar Chavez
La Bamba
Motorcycle Diaries
Selena

Hispanic-American Classics

DVD cover, American Me

American Me (dir. Edward James Olmos, 1992)
Depiction of the Mexican Mafia and the Los Angeles prison system with an anti-drug and anti-gang theme. This film marks the directorial debut of veteran actor, Edward James Olmos.

 Real Women Have Curves (dir. Patricia Cardoso, 2002)
Real Women Have Curves is the story of a first generation Mexican-American teenager on the verge of becoming a woman. Ana receives a full scholarship to Columbia University but her traditional, old-world parents feel that now is the time for Ana to help provide for the family, not the time for college.

 Stand and Deliver (dir. Ramon Menendez, 1988)
Based on the true story of the determined Bolivian-born math teacher Jaime Escalante, this movie follows Escalante as he tries to teach calculus to the at-risk, majority-Latino students at James A. Garfield High School in East Los Angeles.

DVD cover Tortilla Soup

Tortilla Soup (dir. Maria Ripoll, 2001)
A heartwarming comedy that’s all about food, family and a certain kind of magic that only happens at the dinner table. Martin is the culinary genius behind a successful restaurant and the widowed father of three daughters whom he has a compulsion to try and steer in the right direction. Hungry for their independence, the girls find themselves at odds with their traditionalist father.

Zoot Suit (dir. Luis Valdez, 2003)
Based on a play by the same name, this story is set in Los Angeles in the early 1940’s and centers around the trial and wrongful murder conviction of Henry Reyna and three other Chicano gang members. Discriminated against for their zoot suit-wearing Chicano identity, twenty-two members of the 38th Street Gang are placed on trial for a murder they did not commit.

More classics:
El Norte
Beatriz at Dinner
Girlfight
In the Heights
La Mission
Mosquita y Mari
Mi Familia = My Family
Quinceañera

Feature Films 

DVD cover La Misma Luna

Under the Same Moon = La Misma Luna (dir. Patricia Riggen, 2008)
Tells the parallel stories of nine-year-old Carlitos and his mother, Rosario. In the hopes of providing a better life for her son, Rosario works illegally in the U.S. In Mexico, her mother cares for Carlitos. Unexpected circumstances drive both Rosario and Carlitos to embark on their own journeys in a desperate attempt to reunite. Along the way, mother and son face challenges and obstacles but never lose hope that they will one day be together again.

DVD cover, Sleep Dealer

Sleep Dealer = Traficante de Suenos (dir. Alex Rivera, 2009)
Memo Cruz siempre ha soñado con dejar su pequeño y huir a las grandes ciudades fronterizas del Norte. Pero cuando ocurre una tragedia imprevista y se ve obligado a huir, Memo descubre un nuevo mundo mucho más salvaje de lo que había soñado. El futuro próximo de Sleep Dealer es un mundo lleno de drones asesinos, fábricas de tecnología de punta, vendedores de memorias y una salvaje batalla contra los ‘aqua-terroristas’ emitada por televisión.

Set in the near-future is a world marked by closed borders, corporate warriors, and a global digital network. In this world three strangers risk their lives to connect with each other and break the barriers of technology.

More feature films:

Volver
Viva

Roma
Sin Nombre
El Secreto de sus Ojos = The Secret in their Eyes
El Mariachi
Maria Full of Grace
Cinema Mexico: las Peliculas que Hicieron
City of God = Cidade de Deus
Amores Perros

Documentaries

DVD cover Dolores

Dolores (dir. Peter Bratt, 2001)
One of the most important, yet least known activists of our time, Dolores Huerta was an equal partner in founding the first farm workers union with César Chávez. Tirelessly leading the fight for racial and labor justice, Huerta evolved into one of the most defiant feminists of the 20th century — and she continues the fight to this day, in her late 80s. With unprecedented access to this intensely private mother of 11, Peter Bratt’s film Dolores chronicles Huerta’s life.

More documentaries:
Harvest of Empire
Black in Latin America
Latinos beyond reel : challenging a media stereotype
Memories of a Penitent Heart = = Memorias de un corazon penitente
Mercedes Sosa: the Voice of Latin America
Nuestra Comunidad: Latinos in North Carolina

So you think that’s all we have… ??? Guess again!

The Digitalia Film Library offers a great variety of streaming video content including titles from across Latin America; and you can search by country. Duke Libraries provides access to thousands of streaming movies for you to enjoy. Find more great films in these platforms:  Swank Digital Campus, Projectr, Films on Demand World Cinema, Academic Video Online, Docuseek and Kanopy (available with Duke netid/password authentication).

DVD cover Mi Vida Loca

external DVD drive

 

AND we have thousands of DVDs you can borrow – including tons of titles that aren’t streaming anywhere (like Mi Vida Loca) – along with external DVD drives to play them!

 

Hispanic Voices from our Collections

Fall 2024 brings exciting changes to East Campus Libraries.  Lilly Library is being renovated and our staff and services have moved!!! Our first collection spotlight of the year can be found in Lilly Library at Bishop’s House. Our spotlight features books and films that celebrate Hispanic creators and stories.  This post, the first of two, highlights a selection of the books on display. Stay tuned for the movies. Come to East Campus, explore the spotlight, and say hello to Lilly staff in our new digs!

PART I – BOOKS 

 

Book cover
Yaguareté white : poems by Diego Báez

POETRY
Yaguarete White: Poems
Diego Báez’s debut collection explores the sense of alienation that accompanies those who hold multiple, sometimes contesting identities. A second-generation immigrant of mixed Paraguayan and white European descent, the American-born Báez wrestles with his heritage and with what it means to feel perpetually out of place.

More poetry:
Suggest Paradise: Poems
Banana [   ]
The Book of Wanderers
Cantoras

Book cover
Olga Dies Dreaming by Xochitl Gonzalez

FICTION
Olga Dies Dreaming
Set against the backdrop of New York City in the months surrounding the most devastating hurricane in Puerto Rico’s history, Olga Dies Dreaming is a story that examines political corruption, familial strife and the very notion of the American dream – all while asking what it really means to weather a storm.

More fiction:
Silver Nitrate
Latin@ Rising: an Anthology of Latin@ Science Fiction and Fantasy

 

 

Book cover
Razabilly by Nicholas F. Centino

MUSIC
Razabilly: Transforming Sights, Sounds, and History in the Los Angeles Latina/o Rockabilly Scene
Pairing a decade of participant observation with interviews and historical research, Nicholas F. Centino explores the reasons behind a Rockabilly renaissance in 1990s Los Angeles and demonstrates how, as a form of working-class leisure, this scene provides Razabillies with spaces of respite and conviviality within the alienating landscape of the urban metropolis. A nuanced account revealing how and why Los Angeles Latinas/os have turned to and transformed the music and aesthetic style of 1950s rockabilly, Razabilly offers rare insight into this musical subculture, its place in rock and roll history, and its passionate practitioners.

 

 

More music:
The Sounds of Latinidad: Immigrants Making Music and Creating Culture in a Southern City

Rock and Roll Por Vida: Hispanics in Rock, Metal, and My Journey

Book cover
Metamorfosis by Rafael Trelles

ART
MetamorfosisA major review of the career of Rafael Trelles (b. Puerto Rico) since 1992. Included are over 80 images of surreal, fantastical paintings and sculptures. Trelles has an international presence. He founded the group Delfín del Cielo and in Mexico he was one of the founding members of La Iguana Marina and in Puerto Rico, El Alfil.

More art:
Images of the Spirit: Photographs by Graciela Iturbide
Contemporary Casta Portraiture: Nuestra “Calidad”
LatinX Photography in the United States: a Visual History
Our America: the Latino Presence in Art

 

Book cover
How Does It Feel to be Unwanted by Eileen Truax

MEMOIRS
How Does it Feel to be Unwanted?
Veteran reporter, Eileen Truax, weaves the stories of 18 immigrants with cogent analysis of the broader social circumstances of their status to offer a compelling picture of courage and resistance. She relates riveting personal stories while making the case for a more humane immigration policy

More memoirs:
¡Hola Papi! : how to come out in a Walmart parking lot and other life lessons
We Were Always Here: a Mexican-American’s Odyssey
On Becoming Nuyoricans

 

 

 

 

Book cover
LatinX by Claudia Milian

NONFICTION
LatinX
LatinX has neither country nor fixed geography according to Duke professor, Claudia Milian. It is the most powerful conceptual tool of the Latino/a present, an itinerary whose analytic routes incorporate the Global South and ecological devastation. Milian’s trailblazing study deploys the indeterminate but thunderous “X” as intellectual armor, a speculative springboard, and a question for our times that never stops being asked. LatinX sorts out and addresses issues about the unknowability of social realities that exceed our present knowledge.

More non-fiction:
Making the Latino South: a history of racial formation (by Duke professor, Cecilia Márquez)
Abstract barrios : the crises of Latinx visibility in cities
Latino Political Power
Queering the Border: Essays
Latinidad at the Crossroads: Insights into Latinx Identify in the Twenty-First Century