Find a New Way: Coping with Quarantine with these Reads

by Naomi Hafter, Librarian

2020 has been an awkward, unusual time, where so much was turned on its head. Many things will continue to be different as we go forward. How shall we respond? Where shall we find meaning? As things begin opening up we may find ourselves creating an understanding of our experiences and learning new ways of handling what was second nature. Victor Frankl used his experiences to portray people’s survival.

We may not be able to change anything about our circumstances. We can shape our attitude and outlook. How we respond to our surroundings can change and help us successfully manage. 

Man’s Search For Meaning
by Viktor E. Frankl
Book|eBook|Audiobook

Living through a perfectly ghastly experience of the Concentration Camps Victor Frankl saw people who survived as people who had meaning in, or purpose to, their lives. Meaning despite what was going on around them, their attitude and response kept them alive. Frankl was a doctor, having studied psychiatry and neurology, before WWII, his experience and found people who had a reason for their lives were able to bear their surroundings.

With many of our civil and religious rituals and lives changed, with mourning and grieving rituals stopped and as we forge ahead with new routines, where and how can we renew meaning?

Many things resonated with me, this sentence is one:

“The attempt to develop a sense of humor and to see things in a humorous light is some kind of a trick learned while mastering the art of living.” (pg 44)

There are many books we can read to help us find our way as we continue our journey. Here are several.

Start Where You Are
by Pema Chodron
Book|eBook
Help Thanks Wow
by Anne Lamott
Book| eBook|Compact Disc
Wouldn’t Take Nothing For My Journey Now
by Maya Angelou
Book|eBook| Audiocassette
Happiness
by Thich Nhat Hanh / Edoardo Ballerini
eBook

Check out What’s New on the Pratt’s Website

We’re so excited about all of the new changes on our website!  New sections dedicated to young children, kids, teens, and adults highlight all of the resources the Pratt has to offer. The new site is also mobile-friendly so it’s easy to navigate. 

Another one of our favorite parts is the What’s New section on the homepage. You don’t have to look far for the latest materials available from the Pratt Library. Take a look at the eBooks you can download, and the books and DVDs you can reserve for Sidewalk Service.

Sex and Vanity
by Kevin Kwan Book|eBook|Audiobook

Troubled Blood
by Robert Galbraith Book
Friends and Strangers by J. Courtney Sullivan
Book|eBook|Audiobook
The Order
by Daniel Silva
eBook

The Lost and Found Bookshop
by Susan Wiggs
Book
Humankind
by Rutger Bregman
Book
Caste
by Isabel Wilkerson Book|ebook|Audiobook
My Life As A Villainess
by Laura Lippman
Book|eBook
We’re Better Than This by Eljah Cumings
Book

The Photograph
DVD

Birds of Prey
DVD
The Invisible Man
DVD

If you haven’t visited the new prattlibrary,org yet, go ahead and check it out now!

Go Back to School with Film Fridays at the Pratt

By Tom Warner, Best & Next Department

No more pencils no more books
No more teacher’s dirty looks
Out for summer, out till fall
We might not come back at all
– “School’s Out,” Alice Cooper

Despite Alice Cooper’s wishful thinking, school is not out forever. In fact, as the traditional beginning of the new school year approaches this fall, school is in full session on Kanopy – Enoch Pratt’s free online video streaming resource that you can access using your library card – even if school buildings themselves remain closed due to the coronavirus. With that in mind, be sure to join Pratt librarians Tom Warner and Gillian Waldo online at noon on September 11 for their Film Fridays: “Back To School” talk about two Kanopy films that explore the world of the school room – one a tender documentary and the other a depiction of youth in revolt:  


To Be and To Have (2002)
In French with English subtitles

The film won the 2003 César Award for Best Editing and the 2002 Prix Louis Delluc. Click here to watch the trailer.

The one-room “single class” schoolhouse, where one teacher instructs several grades at once, is generally regarded as a quaint thing of the past and a symbol of obsolete and ineffective teaching methods. However, To Be and To Have offers an in-depth look at a small school in rural France where one remarkable man, the soon-to-retire Georges Lopez, has been doing the job of a small teaching staff for 20 years, and has taught several generations of bright and capable children along the way. This touching, award-winning documentary depicts how one teacher can make the all the difference in the world to his students, helping them move onto the next grade or the next school and to grow up to be kind, thoughtful people. According to Philadelphia Inquirer critic Steven Rea, “To Be and to Have is a movie every teacher should see, and every parent, too.”


If… (1968)

The film won the Palme d’Or at the 1969 Cannes Film Festival and was nominated for Best Direction at the 1969 BAFTA Awards. Click here to watch the trailer.

Taking its title from Rudyard Kipling’s famous poem of Victorian-era stoicism and starring a young Malcolm McDowell as “Mick the Rebel,” director Lindsey Anderson’s If... is a social satire that tells the story of an upper-crust British boarding school where the relationship between the students and the authorities becomes increasingly contentious, leading to a standoff. If… was made three years before McDowell’s international breakout role as nihilistic droog Alex in Stanley Kubrick’s A Clockwork Orange and the two parts share some similarities: a rebellious refusal to play by society’s rules or to blindly obey authority figures. And both resort to violent fantasies, with McDowell’s Mick Travis proclaiming, “One man can change the world with a bullet in the right place.” If madness is the only sane response to an insane world, as psychiatrist R.D. Laing once famously observed, then Mick and his mates’ rebellion against the class-conscious oppression of the British public school system is a textbook case of normality. Anderson would reunite with McDowell in 1973’s O Lucky Man!


And, since tomorrow is the ninth anniversary of 9/11, Tom and Gillian will also discuss a short film available on Kanopy that explores the impact of 9/11 as seen through the eyes of a nine-year-old girl whose Tribeca childhood is shattered by the tragic events of September 11, 2001.

I Live At Ground Zero (2002)

Out of her classroom window, Isabella had seen bodies falling from the north tower, an unforgettable sight that instantly propelled her into a maturity beyond her years.


More Back-to-School Docs That Rock

As the nation prepares to go back to school (virtually or otherwise), it’s a good time to start thinking about our educational system and all the challenges facing students, teachers, parents and learning institutions themselves as we move forward. Before the actual school doors open, we can reflect on the way we learn by watching any of the 150 different Education documentaries that you can stream on Kanopy for free using your library card. Kanopy provides subcategories for various special interests, such as public schools, teachers, arts education, anti-bias education, and Special Ed

A few films have even looked at Baltimore schools, such as Richard Chisolm’s Cafeteria Man (2011), Amanda Lipitz’s Step (2017) and HBO’s Hard Times At Douglass High (2008); though the latter two films aren’t on Kanopy, you can still watch them on DVD using Pratt’s Sidewalk Service or Books By Mail resources.

Free Educational Resources to Help You with Back to School

For many it’s the first day of school and we are betting that it looks a lot different than what we all used to. Whether learning in the classroom or from home, there’s one thing that hasn’t changed: the Pratt Library’s commitment to learning.

Here’s a look at a few of the educational resources that the Pratt Library has available. Check them out!

One on One Homework Help & Tutoring . With HelpNow connect with expert tutors, skills building, a 24-hour writing lab, and more.

Educational eBooks for Students. Find curated databases and ebooks with TeenBookCloud, TumbleBookLibrary, and TumbleMath.

Educational Resources for Middle School. Students can find reference content with videos, newspapers, primary sources and much more by using Gale In Context: Middle School.

Enciclopedia Estudiantil Hallazgos. Don’t miss World Book’s excellent editorial content, rich media, and interactive features in Spanish.

Kanopy Gets Out the Vote!

by Tom Warner, Best & Next Department

With less than 100 days until the 2020 presidential election, Kanopy – the free video streaming resource you can access using your Pratt library card – has curated a collection of films that focuses on history and disenfranchisement as it relates to voting in the United States. Hopefully, watching films like Dark Money, Answering the Call, Beyond Elections, and others from Kanopy will inspire us all to vote and make our voices heard this November! For more information on voting in Maryland, please visit The State Board of Elections website here.

BEYOND ELECTIONS (2008, Credit-free) In 1989, the Brazilian Worker’s Party altered the concept of local government when they installed participatory budgeting in Porto Alegre, allowing residents to participate directly in the allocation of city funds. Ten years later, Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez was swept into power with the promise of granting direct participation to the Venezuelan people; who have now formed tens of thousands of self-organized communal councils. In the Southern Cone, cooperative and recuperated factory numbers have grown, and across the Americas social movements and constitutional assemblies are taking authority away from the ruling elites and putting power into the hands of their members and citizens.

THE CANDIDATES (2018) Since 1996, the student body of Townsend Harris High School has been staging the longest running civics experiment in the form of simulating the American electoral process against the backdrop of the real one. In these elaborate mock elections that span an entire semester, candidates must run the whole gamut of an election Grand simulation replete with fake money, media pundits, campaign ads, debates, electioneering, super PACs, and candidates’ spouses. The Candidates dives into the halls of Townsend Harris High School during the months leading up to the 2016 election.

DARK MONEY (2018) This acclaimed documentary (nominated for Best Documentary Feature at the 2019 Academy Awards for the Grand Jury Prize in Documentary at the Sundance Film Festival) examines one of the greatest present threats to American democracy: the influence of untraceable corporate money on our elections and elected officials. The film takes viewers to Montana – a frontline in the fight to preserve fair elections nationwide – to follow a local journalist working to expose the real-life impacts of the US Supreme Court’s Citizens United decision.

ANSWERING THE CALL (2016) The bloody attacks of protestors in Selma on “Bloody Sunday” in 1965 led to the historic protection of all Americans’ right to vote. This film explores a cherished family story of Selma and the current state of voter suppression in America.

VOTING MATTERS (2018) When a key section of the Voting Rights Act was struck down in 2013, several states with a history of racial discrimination immediately attempted to pass laws that further restricted voter rights. This film follows civil rights attorney Donita Judge as she helps several voters in Ohio cast ballots even though they initially were turned away.

And don’t forget that 2020 is the Women’s Suffrage Centennial year. Celebrate the 100th anniversary of the 19th amendment that granted women the right to vote by watching these free Kanopy suffrage documentaries.

Pioneering Political Women
Long before Kamala Harris became the first Black (and first South Asian) Vice-Presidential candidate, there were other political pioneers of Women’s Rights, such as Shirley Chisolm (the first Black Congresswoman and the first Black woman to run for President) and Elaine Ferraro (the first female Vice-Presidential running mate). Kanopy chronicles their stories in the documentaries below:

Discuss films with Tom and Humanities Librarian Gillian, every other Friday at 12pm during Film Fridays.