
Please join us for the opening of The Ramp Gallery’s spring exhibit: Topophilia: A Love of Place.
Opening remarks at 2pm on Friday, February 22.
The Ramp Gallery is located in Hawthorne-Longfellow Library, basement level.
Curated by Blanche Froelich, ’19, the Ramp Gallery features student art work from all four class years.
September 27th
October 25th
December 6th
January 31st
March 7th
April 25th

Over the course of the academic year, our Research and Instruction Librarians provided direct support for 150 unique courses and hundreds of student research projects. Of particular note this semester was the collaboration between Professor of History Patrick Rael and Marieke Van Der Steenhoven, Special Collections Education and Outreach Librarian. History in the Archives, a new capstone seminar in the History Department, developed and taught by Professor Rael in close collaboration with Van Der Steenhoven, allowed upper level students to experience the excitement and challenges of conducting original historical research through a deep dive into Bowdoin’s remarkable archives and manuscript collections. Through group discussions, hands-on activities, practicums, guest lecturers, readings, and other pedagogical approaches, the seminar’s ten students were introduced to the fundamentals of archival research, and in the process, how to form solid research questions, recognize leads, and then follow them out across collections. Each then chose an area of research well represented in Bowdoin’s vast holdings with the objective of writing a 25- to 30-page paper on topics including slavery, the Civil War, missionary encounters with Native American communities, the Cuban Revolution, the Medical School of Maine, and the 1970 student strike at Bowdoin.
Please join us for the last of this spring’s book launches, hosted by the Library. Professor Saiber will discuss her new book, “Measured Words: Computation and Writing in Renaissance Italy” with Aaron Kitch, Associate Professor of English.

During the summer of 2017, Darius Riley took photographs of his hometown of East Palo Alta, California. E.P.A. is one of the last cities in the Bay Area with affordable housing. In contrast, it is surrounded by some of the wealthiest communities in the United States. These poignant images present to the viewer Darius’s wish to capture the E.P.A. of his youth before it, too, changes.