News & Announcements

  • San Diego Computer Museum Logo

    Status of the San Diego Computer Museum Collection

    The San Diego Computer Museum (http://www.computer-museum.org/) donated its collection to the San Diego State University Library in 2005 and, since then, materials from that collection have been used occasionally in library exhibitions and public programs. The collection is currently unprocessed and unavailable for use by the public.

  • Cover art from Micro Misterio 489, Los Titeres.

    ¡Micro Misterio!

    Special Collections and University Archives is beyond thrilled to announce our acquisition of a collection of cover art from rare Mexican pulp mini-comics!

  • From the engraved title page of Apian's Cosmographia (1524)

    Collection Spotlight: Historic Astronomy

    Special Collections is home to the Ernst Zinner Historic Astronomy Collection. This world-class collection contains some of the oldest and rarest titles in the library, including thirteen incunabula (books printed before 1501), the first edition of Nicolaus Copernicus’ seminal text, De Revolutionibus Orbium Coelestium (1543), and Tycho Brahe’s Astronomiae Instauratae Mechanica (1602).

  • Illustration of different types of Americans in voting booths

    The Vote in Words and Pictures

    November is Coming! And this year, with it comes another national election in the United States. We thought it would be fun to raise awareness about our democratic system by taking a look at some comic books that explore democracy and voting in the United States.

  • Index of Prohibited Books title page

    Banned Books Week 2020

    In honor of Banned Books Week, Special Collections invites you to consider how dominant power structures have the ability to shape history and society by restricting access to information.

  • Deliberate and Afraid of Nothing

    Deliberate and Afraid of Nothing: 200 Years of Women's Activism

    In 2020, we celebrate 100 years since the ratification of the 19th amendment, the most significant expansion of voting rights in United States history.

  • Death of the Death of the Novel - the Larry McCaffery Archive

    Death of the Death of the Novel: The Larry McCaffery Archive

    In partnership with the Common Experience, Digital Humanities, the English Department, and MALAS, Special Collections and University Archives is pleased to announce the opening of our new exhibit, Death of the Death of the Novel: the Larry McCaffery Archive.

  • The main buildings of the Lomaland Theosophical community, located in Point Loma, San Diego from 1898 to 1942.

    Revisiting Visionary Utopia: Katherine Tingley’s Lomaland, 1898-1942

    The exhibit explores the Theosophical community of Lomaland, which flourished on Point Loma, San Diego from 1898 until 1942. A contemplative, intentional community, Lomaland was an experiment to make Theosophy “intensely practical,” according to its founder and spiritual leader, Katherine Tingley.

  • Detail of Ms. Marvel and Green Lantern from DemoGRAPHICS mural

    DemoGRAPHICS

    Special Collections is pleased to announce the opening of our new comic arts exhibit, DemoGRAPHICS: Voices and Visionaries from the SDSU Comic Arts Collection.