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Search database:
infoweb.newsbank.com
Subjects:
News; American History; American Literary Studies
Summary:
African American Periodicals, 1825-1995 features more than 170 wide-ranging periodicals by and about African Americans.
Search database:
infoweb.newsbank.com
Subjects:
American History; American Literary Studies; Race and Ethnicity
Summary:
"Created from the Library Company of Philadelphia's acclaimed Afro-Americana Collection - an accumulation that begain with Benjamin Franklin and steadily increased throughout its entire history - this unique online resource provides researchers with more than 12,000 printed works. These essential books, pamphlets and broadsides, including many lesser-known imprints, hold an unparalleled record of African American history, literature and culture. This collection spans nearly 400 years, from the early 16th to the early 20th century. Critically important subjects covered include the West's discovery and exploitation of Africa; the rise of slavery in the New World along with the growth and success of abolitionist movements; the development of racial thought, including political protest and resistance to racism; descriptions of African American life -- slave and free -- throughout the Americans; and slavery and race in fiction and drama. Also featured are printed works of African American individuals and organizations."
Search database:
search.ebscohost.com
Subjects:
American History; American Literary Studies; News
Summary:
Index and full text of historical American periodicals held by the American Antiquarian Society. The completed collection will cover a wide range of topics including agriculture, entertainment, history, literary criticism, politics, as well as other aspects of American society from the seventeenth through the late nineteenth century.
Search database:
www.comp-index.com
Subjects:
American History; American Literary Studies; News
Summary:
Indexes the University Microfilms American periodicals series.
Search database:
search.proquest.com
Subjects:
American Literary Studies; American History
Summary:
American Periodicals from the Center for Research Libraries is a full-text electronic resource containing full-color scans of original print documents archived at the Center for Research Libraries (CRL). The collection spans the nineteenth century through the dawn of the twentieth century, containing labor, trade, literary, scientific, and photographic periodicals, as well as other historically-significant titles. The resource provides enhanced access to full runs of hundreds of periodicals, resulting in a tool which is vital both to the research process and classroom experience.
Search database:
search.proquest.com
Subjects:
American History; American Literary Studies; News
Summary:
Includes over 1,000 periodicals and 7,000,000 pages of full text periodicals covering the years 1740-1900.
Search database:
www.alexanderstreet2.com
Subjects:
Language; American Literary Studies; American History; Race and Ethnicity
Summary:
"When complete, the collection will include more than 250 plays, of which some 50% have never been published before. The database also includes selected playbills, production photographs and other ephemera related to the plays." -- home page
Search database:
c19index.chadwyck.com
Subjects:
British and Commonwealth History; American History; British and Commonwealth Literary Studies; American Literary Studies
Summary:
C19 indexes publications of the Anglo-American World, 1790-1919. Collections expand with each release of the database. You may search the entire index and thus all the resources contained within it, or limit your search to one of the individual resources included in the database.
Search database:
search.ebscohost.com
Subjects:
American History; Sociology; Art, Architecture and Design; Language; American Literary Studies; Race and Ethnicity; Spanish, Portuguese and Latin American Studies
Summary:
Portions of the database were published and sold separately as the Chicano periodical index; the Chicano index; Arte Chicano; the Chicano anthology index; and the Chicana studies index. Beginning with Version 3.5, the coverage of the Chicano database on CD-ROM expanded to includes bibliographic information on Puerto Ricans, Cuban Americans, and Central American refugees as well as persons of Mexican heritage. Citations begin in mid-1960s and index terms are from the Chicano thesarus and are built into the system.
At the Library:
Green Library » InfoCenter (non-circulating) » E184 .M5 C43 in-library use only
Search database:
infotrac.galegroup.com
Subjects:
American History; Language; American Literary Studies; General and Reference Works
At the Library:
SAL3 (off-campus storage) » Stacks » Z1224 .C6 ... must be paged/requested
SAL3 (off-campus storage) » In process » Z1224 .C6 V.334 2013 must be paged/requested
Green Library » InfoCenter (non-circulating) » Z1224 .C6 in-library use only
Search database:
ets.umdl.umich.edu
Subjects:
American Literary Studies; American History
Summary:
"The University of Michigan, NewsBank/Readex Co., and the American Antiquarian Society are cooperating in a Text Creation Partnership to create 6,000 accurately keyed and fully searchable SGML/XML text editions from among the 40,000 titles available in the Evans Early American Imprints Collection."
Title:
Early American imprints. First series.
Search database:
infoweb.newsbank.com
Subjects:
American History; American Literary Studies; General and Reference Works
Summary:
Provides full-text and full-page-image access to books, pamphlets and broadsides printed in America from 1639-1800. Based on the renowned American Bibliography by Charles Evans (14 vols., 1903-34, 1955-59); and subsequent bibliographic works by Roger Bristol, James Mooney and Clifford Shipton. This database includes more than 1,000 works located, catalogued and digitized since the completion of the earlier microfilmed set, Early American Imprints, 1639-1800, which was also based on Charles Evans' American Bibliography.
Title:
Early American imprints. First series (Online)
Search database:
infoweb.newsbank.com
Subjects:
American History; American Literary Studies; General and Reference Works
Summary:
From the acclaimed holdings of the Library Company of Philadelphia comes a broad range of recently uncovered books, pamphlets and broadsides, most of which were not included in either Charles Evans' monumental work or Roger Bristol's supplement. Printed during a 130-year period spanning the colonial era and the formation of the new nation, these nearly 1,000 rare and unique items represent a remarkable enrichment of the Readex digital edition of Early American Imprints.-- Publisher's web site.
Title:
Early American imprints. First series (Online). Supplement.
Search database:
infoweb.newsbank.com
Subjects:
Religious Studies; American Literary Studies; American History
Summary:
Covering every aspect of American life during the early decades of the United States, Early American Imprints, Series II (1801-1819) provides full-text access to the 36,000 American books, pamphlets and broadsides published in the first nineteen years of the nineteenth century. Based on the authoritative bibliography by Ralph B. Shaw and Richard H. Shoemaker and supplemented by thousands of new items. Offers fully searchable text and a browse feature with topical indexes. Bibliographic records created by the AAS are integrated into the database, providing additional access points.
Search database:
dlxs2.library.cornell.edu
Subjects:
American History; American Literary Studies; News
Summary:
Digital versions of selections from Cornell University Library's collection. Features monograph volumes and journal articles published in the nineteenth century. Focuses on the major journal literature of the period, ranging from general interest publications to those with more targeted audiences such as agriculture. Links to the University of Michigan's collection by the same title. "The Making of America (MOA) is a digital library of primary sources in American social history from the Antebellum period through Reconstruction. A joint effort of the University of Michigan and Cornell University, the database is housed on two servers, one at Cornell and one at Michigan. At this writing, MOA contains 1.5 million pages from 19th century monographs and journals. According to the site, particular strengths of the Michigan collection are education, psychology, American history, sociology, religion, and science and technology, while Cornell focuses mainly on digitizing general interest periodicals. The sites are comprised of pages scanned from the original volumes using Optical Character Recognition software, and are full-text searchable and accessible through screen reader software. The collections can be searched using limiters, proximity operators, material types and time periods. It is also possible to browse by journal title and volume or article title and author. Both sites also feature excellent help guides. Given the wide variety of resources, MOA is useful for upper-elementary through graduate school study"--"Best Free Reference Web Sites 2003, " RUSA Quarterly, Fall 2003; reviewed Apr. 12, 2003.
Search database:
quod.lib.umich.edu
Subjects:
American History; American Literary Studies; News
Summary:
Digital versions of selections from University of Michigan Library's collection. Features monograph volumes and journal articles published in the nineteenth century. Focuses on the major journal literature of the period, ranging from general interest publications to those with more targeted audiences such as agriculture. Links to the Cornell University Library collection by the same title. "The Making of America (MOA) is a digital library of primary sources in American social history from the Antebellum period through Reconstruction. A joint effort of the University of Michigan and Cornell University, the database is housed on two servers, one at Cornell and one at Michigan. At this writing, MOA contains 1.5 million pages from 19th century monographs and journals. According to the site, particular strengths of the Michigan collection are education, psychology, American history, sociology, religion, and science and technology, while Cornell focuses mainly on digitizing general interest periodicals. The sites are comprised of pages scanned from the original volumes using Optical Character Recognition software, and are full-text searchable and accessible through screen reader software. The collections can be searched using limiters, proximity operators, material types and time periods. It is also possible to browse by journal title and volume or article title and author. Both sites also feature excellent help guides. Given the wide variety of resources, MOA is useful for upper-elementary through graduate school study"--"Best Free Reference Web Sites 2003, " RUSA Quarterly, Fall 2003; reviewed Apr. 12, 2003.
Search database:
solomon.imld.alexanderstreet.com
Subjects:
History; Political Science; Race and Ethnicity; American Literary Studies; Spanish, Portuguese and Latin American Studies; American History
Search database:
solomon.nwld.alexanderstreet.com
Subjects:
Feminist Studies; American Literary Studies; American History
Summary:
Full-text database of letters and diaries of women who lived in North America before 1950. Browsing and searching of both the bibliographic and full-text elements provided by PhiloLogic software.

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