International Open Access Week begins on October 20th, with events happening across universities to educate and spread the word about the potential benefits of open access.
The theme of 2025 Open Access Week is “Who Owns Our Knowledge?”, addressing questions about information control and how we as authors and creatives can make our works available to the public without compromising values or integrity.
Shannon and Brown Libraries will be hosting hybrid brown bag lunch sessions on Tuesday and Wednesday to discuss OA topics. Register and bring a lunch (or watch online) and enjoy some lively presentations and discussions about open access!
The University of Virginia Library was pleased to welcome Leo Lo as University Librarian and Dean of Libraries in September of this year. The Cavalier Daily, UVA’s student-run news outlet, talked to Dr. Lo in early October about his hopes for the future and experience so far at UVA.
Leo Lo, photographed in Shannon Library. Photo by Ken Fabia for The Cavalier Daily.
The concept is simple: gather together on Wednesday afternoons and read in peaceful silence in Shannon Library’s light-filled Memorial Hall. Silent Reading Study Break, a new weekly event created by librarians Haley Gillilan and Mandy Rizki, along with the Library Student Council, is the University of Virginia Library’s way of carving out time for reading.
The latest exhibition in the Main Gallery of the Albert and Shirley Small Special Collections Library takes an alphabetical approach to UVA Library’s collections. “The ABCs of the UVA Library,” curated by UVA Library staff members, displays approximately 200 Library items grouped into 48 topics. Each topic corresponds to a letter of the alphabet, ranging from architecture (A) to zines (Z).
“This exhibition showcases the rich and assorted collections of the University of Virginia Library, highlighting the Library staff who make those materials discoverable and accessible,” said Holly Robertson, Curator of University Library Exhibitions, who organized “ABCs” along with Exhibitions Coordinator Jacquelyn Kim. Nearly 50 Library staff members served as curators, and the exhibition itself is just as wide-ranging, with display locations not only in the Special Collections gallery but also in Shannon, Clemons, Fine Arts, and Brown libraries as well.
The University of Virginia Library has six locations, an array of cozy study spaces, millions of items available for checkout or browsing, and new resources arriving each day. And did you know we also offer events throughout the year ranging from exhibitions to concerts for UVA and the Charlottesville community ?
Join us at the Library this fall for reading groups, writing cafés, crafting workshops, and open educational resource sessions. All Library events are free.
Hispanic Heritage Month, which runs from September 15 to October 15 each year, celebrates the contributions of Hispanic and Latino communities in the U.S. To celebrate this month, we’re recommending a few books and films that highlight different aspects of the Hispanic/Latino experience. All are available through the UVA Library via the links provided. Note that the first two novels mentioned here can be found in the Popular Books collection on the fourth floor of Shannon Library, which features several hundred recent fiction and non-fiction titles, primarily for pleasure reading.
In 1990, American historian Sue Peabody was researching her dissertation on enslaved peoples’ pre-revolutionary freedom lawsuits in France when she came upon an intriguing story. In 1817 on Île Bourbon (now Réunion), a French-colonized island in the Indian Ocean, a 31-year-old enslaved man named Furcy Madeleine brought legal proceedings before the Saint-Denis District Court against his master Joseph Lory. Furcy’s suit contested his status as a slave and claimed his “ingenuity” — his freedom of birth.
Peabody, now a Distinguished Professor of History at Washington State University, set the history aside at the time because the trial’s ruling did not take place until half a century after the French Revolution. But in 2007, her interest in the case was reignited when she saw that a set of documents concerning the lawsuit had been purchased at auction in 2005 by the Departmental Archives of Réunion. Intrigued, she contacted a historian at the Université de La Réunion, who invited her to attend a colloquium for historians of the Indian Ocean in 2008. At that conference, she met French legal historian Jérémy Boutier.
In August, the Virginia Film Festival welcomed director Bill Banowsky in conversation following a showing of his film, “A Savage Art: The Life & Cartoons of Pat Oliphant.” The film features archival footage and hundreds of Oliphant works, and the showing was a homecoming of sorts, since the University of Virginia Library houses Oliphant’s archive, which was critical in the making of the film.
Marking the public opening of the film this month, Banowsky said:
Whether you’re a new student or a returning faculty member, we at UVA Library are ready to help you make the most of your Fall 2025 semester. The Library has everything to help you succeed — books, comfortable study spaces, locations all over Grounds, and staff who are ready to help with research, teaching, publishing, and more.
Check out this overview of the UVA Library system and its offerings. We hope you’ll visit one of our six locations soon — see more about that below!
Library spaces
The UVA Library has six locations, each with different subject specialties:
“Artificial intelligence systems are thirsty,” writes Leo S. Lo in a recent column for The Conversation, an independent news organization.
Lo, the incoming University Librarian and Dean of Libraries at the University of Virginia, established the Task Force on AI Competencies for Library Workers for the Association of College and Research Libraries, where he serves as president. In addition to his role as Dean of Libraries, Lo will also serve as Advisor to the Provost for AI Literacy and as a Professor of Education at UVA.
As the spring semester continues, libraries across Grounds fill with students reviewing notes, finishing projects and writing papers late into the evening.
“We are facing a technology that is so disruptive … that I have never seen something like this disrupting education in my lifetime, calculators, internet and computers — I don't think any of them can compare to what is happening right now,” Library Dean Leo Lo said.
An estimated 2,000 people, from fourth graders to senior citizens, formed a line outside the Rotunda for a chance to view the “McGregor Dunlap broadside” copy of the declaration, one of two in the University Library’s Albert and Shirley Small Special Collections Library. The copies are among just 26 originals known to still exist.
Hundreds of visitors lined up at the University of Virginia’s Rotunda on Monday, February 16 to view one of the nation’s earliest printed copies of the Declaration of Independence. The broadside on display is one of two copies UVA Library preserves.