At the border: An exhibition of artists’ work in response to the Partition of Punjab
This exhibition presents a selection of the results of a visual arts and community engagement project in 2018-9 that explores the meaning and practice of “heritage” in the Punjab, a linguistic and cultural region divided in 1947 between the two successor states to British colonial rule, Pakistan and India, and connects this heritage to Canada. The exhibition by the South Asian Canadian Histories Association (SACHA) in partnership with the University of British Columbia, is represented by Anne Murphy (Asian Studies/co-Director, Centre for India and South Asia Research), as a part of a larger overall project that was originally initiated through a grant from the Arts and Humanities Research Council (AHRC) UK. By pursuing this project here in Vancouver and at UBC, we hope to enhance UBC South Asian community engagement through community-based art work, helping an international project come “home” to BC.
This exhibition will be on display in the Irving K. Barber Learning Centre’s Level 2 foyer from September 1st to 30th, 2019.
Daniel Murphy
Senior Program Assistant, Chapman Learning Commons
Background
Daniel Murphy joined the Chapman Learning Commons (CLC) team in September 2020 as a Program Assistant, and later took on the Senior Program Assistant role in 2024. Prior to starting at UBC, Daniel completed a BA in Anthropology at McGill University, with a focus on Archaeology and Classics. He is also a certified Library Technician.
Current Roles and Responsibilities
In his current role, Daniel assists with the daily operation of CLC, working alongside student-staff and program management. He is responsible for student scheduling, payroll, maintaining CLC spaces and equipment, and facilitating room-bookings. He also assists with student on-boarding and training.
Contact
Phone: 604 827 5949
Email: daniel.murphy@ubc.ca
UBC Library users now able to access the digital archives of Maclean’s Magazine and the Toronto Star
Indigenous (Un)History Month Exhibition: RavenSpace – Digital Publishing in Indigenous Studies
June is recognized as Aboriginal History Month but at UBC Library we hold a tradition of (Un)History Month — a celebration and acknowledgement of the importance of Indigenous Peoples – not only in history – but in the present and future.
This collaborative exhibit showcases the first digital books to come from RavenSpace, a new model of publishing, for interactive, media-rich books in Indigenous studies, where communities and scholars can work together in a culturally respectful way:
- Elsie Paul, with Davis McKenzie, Paige Raibmon, and Harmony Johnson, As I Remember It: Teachings (ʔəms taʔaw) from the life of a Sliammon Elder (UBC Press)
- Kathryn Bunn-Marcuse, with Coreen Child, Kaleb Child, and Tommy Child of the Kwag’uł, Kans Hiłile (Making It Right): A Collaborative Reframing of Kwakiutl Film and Audio Recordings with Franz Boas (University of Washington Press)
- Musqueam First Nation, Musqueam Stories Transformed (UBC Press).
RavenSpace is an initiative of UBC Press with the participation of University of Washington Press.
Come and see how these publications – with animations, classroom resources, and multiple pathways through text and media – are made.
EXHIBIT LAUNCH AND RECEPTION: June 5 from 5:30 to 7 pm, Chilcotin Room (256), IKBLC
Exhibit partners include UBC Press, Musqueam First Nation and UBC Library.
The exhibit is open to the public daily from 6 a.m. to 1 a.m. in the Irving K. Barber Learning Centre, Level 2, and will be on display from June 1 until August 30, 2019.
During the first week of June there are several satellite events happening as part of Indigenous (Un)History Month, see the attached poster for more details:
Teaching through telling: The RavenSpace Publishing Project
June 4 from 9 am – 3:30 p.m.
UBC Education Library
Colloquia: RavenSpace – Taking the Book to the Web
June 5 from 1:30 – 5 p.m.
UBC First Nations Longhouse
UBC is located on the traditional, ancestral, unceded territory of the xʷməθkʷəy̓əm (Musqueam) people.
About Indigenous (Un)History Month
The “un” represents the continued importance and relevance of Indigenous peoples in Canada and around the world. These contributions should be recognized daily, not just once a year. UBC Library’s first Aboriginal (Un)History Month event kicked off in June 2012.