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February 07, 2008

Two New Databases of Special Interest to Liberal Arts

The Iter Bibliography is useful for scholars of the Middle Ages and Renaissance (400-1700). It contains "more than 1,000,000 records for articles, essays, books, dissertation abstracts, encyclopedia entries and reviews. This material has been collected from 8,707 publications, including 1,707 journals." Right now the "check for full text" is your FindIt@CSU button.

The World Shakespeare Bibliography Online "provides annotated entries for all important books, articles, book reviews, dissertations, theatrical productions, reviews of productions, audiovisual materials, electronic media, and other scholarly and popular materials related to Shakespeare and published or produced between 1962 and 2008." There are currently "more than 114,231 records in this version." Use advanced search to look for words in title, etc.

January 30, 2008

New Database: Early American Imprints, Series I: Evans, 1639-1800

Brought to you by the generosity of the Irene Bostrom Endowment in the College of Liberal Arts, Evans contains virtually every book, pamphlet and broadside published in America over a 160-year period. It contains more than 36,000 printed works and 2.3 million pages. These are primary source advertisements, almanacs, bibles, broadsides, catalogs, charters and by-laws, contracts, cookbooks, elegies, eulogies, laws, maps, narratives, novels, operas, pamphlets, plays, poems, primers, sermons, songs, speeches, textbooks, tracts, travelogues, treaties and more.

The online collection may be searched by subject and browsed by genre, subjects, author, history of printing, place of publication and language. Topics covered include agriculture, astronomy, child rearing, commerce, constitution, education, foreign affairs, medicine, military operations, operas, religious thought, revolutionary war, slavery, suffrage, work, and much more.

January 22, 2008

New Search Platform for History Databases

America: History & Life and Historical Abstracts are now on a different search platform. Already available for a number of months, the new default search software for these two databases is now EBSCO. America: History & Life covers U.S. and Canadian history and culture from prehistory to the present. Historical Abstracts covers the history of the world from 1450 to the present (excluding the U.S. and Canada).

November 02, 2007

Oxford English Dictionary (OED) Online Now at CSU!

The largest dictionary of the English language is now available 24/7 to CSU affiliates. Look up the meaning of words, find their etymologies (history of the word), search for words by keywords in their definitions, search for words that beginning with a particular suffix, and much more. From their about page:
"The Oxford English Dictionary is the accepted authority on the evolution of the English language over the last millennium. It is an unsurpassed guide to the meaning, history, and pronunciation of over half a million words, both present and past. It traces the usage of words through 2.5 million quotations from a wide range of international English language sources, from classic literature and specialist periodicals to film scripts and cookery books."
Take a look! If you cannot think of a word to look up OED will select one (get an entry) for you.

September 28, 2007

New History Page on Early Modern European History

There is a brand new Web page on Early Modern European History. Find it directly at:
http://lib.colostate.edu/research/history/earlymodeuro.html

or via the History Research Guide, http://lib.colostate.edu/research/history/ which also features subject pages on:

United States of America (History).
American Studies.
Colorado History.
Elizabethan/Stuart.
Medieval History (Europe & England).
Medieval Middle East History.
Middle Eastern History and U.S. Foreign Relations.
Roman Republic.
Women's Suffrage.
World History.

June 29, 2007

History Databases Will Change Platforms

America: History & Life and Historical Abstracts currently on the ABC-CLIO platform have been sold to EBSCO. Therefore, the software used to search these two databases will change to EBSCO at some point, but not immediately. A message will be added to this blog when CSU starts using the different search software. One nice benefit of the change will be the ability to search not only these two databases at the same time, but the ability to search simultaneously additional history-related databases as well--for example, Social Sciences Abstracts and Humanities International Index.