History 290: Junior Seminar: Historiography
Professor Fortin
Research Resources, Milne Library, SUNY College at Oneonta, Spring 2008
Steps in library research | Finding Background Information | Finding books | Finding
articles | Primary sources | Citations | Plagiarism
Steps in library research: Overview
- Select a topic. (If your topic is too narrow, you
will have difficulty finding enough information; if it is too broad, you will
be swamped with information.)
- Background information can often be found in encyclopedias, dictionaries,
and other reference works.
- Find books (Books often treat a topic more
comprehensively than journal articles. Books can be a good place to find an
overview of a topic. References to additional articles and books can often be
found in a bibliography at the end of a chapter.)
- Find articles (Journal articles usually have the
most up to date information on a topic. Since journal articles are often more
focused than books, they may provide more specific information than books.
References to additional articles and books can often be found in a
bibliography at the end of an article.)
- Consider supplementary materials such as internet sources. Many primary
sources are available online.
- Organize the findings.
- Use the information to address the research topic.
Finding Background Information
(compiled by Dr. Mary Lynn Bensen)
On Historiography
- A Global Encyclopedia of Historical Writing REF D 13 G47 1998 2 vols.
- Offers overviews of the historiography of particular countries and topics in addition to providing background on historians with appended lists of additional reading.
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- Dictionary of the History of Ideas REF CB 5 D52 v. II
- Includes a lengthy essay on historiography broken down by time period.
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- Books on historiography in the circulating collection can be found with call numbers D 13... and D 14... section on the third floor.
On Historians
|
|
Blackwell Dictionary of Historians
Encyclopedia of Historians & Historical Writing
Global Encyclopedia of Historical Writing
Great Historians of the Modern Age |
Ref D B58 1988
Ref D 14 E53 1999
Ref D 13 G47 1998
Ref D 14 G 75 1991 |
-
Print Bibliographies
- Annual Bulletin of Historical
Literature 1971 - 2003 REF D 10 H52 A3
- Selected and critical reviews of recent historical
books, journals and articles covering all periods of
history.
-
- Historiography: An Annotated
Bibliography of Journal Articles, Books, and
Dissertations REF D 13 H57
1987 2 vols.
- Includes a brief introduction to historiography and
listings of books, journal articles, conference
proceedings, and dissertations under the areas of
methodology and schools of historiography, economic,
social, intellectual, and political histories,
geographic areas, and special topics.
Finding books
- Library Catalog
- Find books, videos, compact discs,
reserves, and other materials. It does NOT have information about individual journal
articles. The Advanced Search feature allows limiting by
language, series, collection, document type, year.
- To view detailed information about an item, click on the
number link on the left of the entry.
- Availability is shown by numbers to the right (e. g.
1/0). The first number is the number owned by the library; the last
number is how many are checked out.
- Subjects are listed at the bottom of the detailed entry.
These subjects will link to other materials on the same subject.
-
- A BASIC KEYWORD search allows you to search by fields such as author,
subject, words in title, exact title.
Use terms such as "Sources", "Correspondence", "Interviews", "Personal
Narratives" to find primary source material.
-
- A BASIC BROWSE search displays an alphabetical list of entries.
This is particularly useful when you don't know the exact author, title, or
subject heading.
-
- For historical subjects, you may find it easier to browse the print
Library of Congress Subject Headings (multi-volume red books by
the computers near Milne Library Room 108) to find the
appropriate subject headings for your topic.
-
- Hartwick
College (link on the Milne Library home page)
- SUNY Oneonta students may borrow materials with a valid SUNY ID card.
-
-
WorldCAT
(link the Milne Library home page)
- A catalog of books owned by libraries world wide. Good for in-depth
research of a topic.Use terms such as "Sources", "Correspondence", "Interviews", "Personal
Narratives" to find primary source material. Interlibrary loan
usually takes a few days but
occasionally can take longer. Be sure to allow plenty of time!
-
- Google
Books
- A good source for out-of-copyright books. Since the collections of
several large research libraries have been digitized it may be possible to
get on-line copies of books written during the 17th, 18th, 19th, and 20th
centuries.
Finding articles
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-
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America History and Life
(link on the Milne Library home page under
Databases by Name A-Z).
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Abstracts of articles & dissertations covering U.S. and Canadian history from
prehistory to the present. Includes links to some full-text articles.
-
-
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Historical Abstracts (link on the
Milne Library home page under Databases by Name A-Z).
- Indexes international scholarly literature on world
history of the period between 1450 and the present,
excluding the U.S. and Canada. Includes links to some
full-text articles.
-
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Academic Search Premier (link on the Milne Library home page)
- Provides full text for nearly 4,650 journals (including more
than 3,600 peer-reviewed publications) and indexing and
abstracts for more than 8,200 journals in nearly every area of
academic study.
-
-
JSTOR
archive (link on the Milne Library home page)
- Provides access to the full text of over 300 scholarly
journals across many subject areas, including history. The objective of JSTOR is to provide all issues back to Volume 1, Issue 1 for all
journals. (Due to copyright restrictions, the most recent 3-5 years are
usually unavailable.)
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Project Muse (link on the Milne Library home page)
- Full text of over 100 scholarly journals in fields including
literature and criticism, history, the visual and performing
arts, cultural studies, political science, gender studies, and
economics.
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- Arts and Humanities Search
- A
citation index. Citation indexes are
useful if you are interested in who
cited a particular work or a listing of
cited references from an article. References to over 1100
arts and humanities sources.
Although journals indexed are from 1980 to
the present, it is a good place to find
references to older articles. Topics of the
articles range from ancient to modern.
-
-
Central Search (link on the Milne Library home page)
- Central Search is designed to search many databases at once. It is a good choice when you wish to find which databases have the most information on a topic or after other possibilities have been exhausted Fine-tuned searches are best conducted in individual databases.
Finding the full-text of the article:
When the full text is not in the database, follow these steps, beginning with number one, until you are able to obtain a copy of the article.
1.
Find It! Look for Find It!
button. This links to a menu that indicates other databases where the full text of the article might be found. Often there is a direct link to the full text of the article. If not, search the indicated database by the title of the article. If the full text isn’t available, go to step 2.
2.
Serials Solutions. Open a new browser window. From the library home page select
Serials Solutions. Type in the title of the periodical (NOT the title of the article) you’re looking for. This will bring up a screen listing databases
that have full text for the periodical you want. Once in a databases, search by the title of the article. If one of the listed databases doesn’t have the full text of the article you want, go to step 3.
3.
Library Subscription. From the library home page select
Search the Catalog. Click on
Reserves or Journals in the top bar, then choose Journal Titles in Milne Library, then type in the title of the journal. This will tell you if the library subscribes to the journal in print.
If the library does not subscribe to the periodical, the article can be borrowed through
Interlibrary Loan.
Primary sources:
"`Primary sources are materials produced by people or groups directly
involved in the event or topic under consideration, either as participants or as
witnesses. Examples of primary sources include eyewitness accounts, decrees,
letters and diaries, newspapers and magazines, speeches, autobiographies, and
treatises... By examining
primary sources, historians gain insights into the thoughts, behaviors, and
experiences or the people of the past. When using a written primary sources, it
is important to read the source itself. Do not simply rely on another
historian's analysis of the source." (Rampolla, Mary Lynn. A Pocket Guide to
Writing in History, p. 4.)
"Primary sources may be published or unpublished. A book by Ernest Hemingway
and newspaper review of Hemingway's book are both published, but the former is a
primary source and the later is a secondary one. Alternatively, however, if
researching how critics reviewed Hemingway's works, the newspaper reviews would
be a primary source for that investigation. Newspapers, magazines, mail-order
catalogs, government publications, corporate annual reports, and a host of other
published items are primary sources of great significance". (D'Aniello, Charles
A. Teaching Bibliographic Skills in History, p. 266
The Milne Library
Catalog can be used to search for primary documents. Add terms such
as Sources, Correspondence, Interviews, Personal Narratives to your
search.
Microfilm in Milne Library (mostly related to American history)
Microfilm is often an excellent way to find older materials that are too
fragile for general use. Milne Library owns many parts of the The American
Periodical Series (1741 - 1900). Descriptions of the periodicals can be found in
American Periodicals 1741 - 1900 Milne Library Reference PN4877.H65.
Sample titles from the American Periodical Series:
APS 1: American magazine and historical
chronicle: Sept. 1743-Dec. 1746
APS 2: American magazine; or, A monthly view of the political state of the
British colonies: Jan.-Mar. 1741
APS 8: Boston weekly magazine Mar. 2-16, 1743APS 8: The Censor Nov.23, 1771
- May 2, 1772
APS 19: The New American magazine 1758-1760
APS 19: New-England magazine of knowledge and pleasure 1758-1759
APS 24: Occasional reverberator: Sept. 7-Oct. 5, 1753
APS 24: Pennsylvania Magazine Jan. 1775 -
July 1776
APS 24: Penny Post Jan 9 - 27 1769
APS 26: Royal American Magazine Jan 1774 - Mar 1775
APS 30: United States Magazine: A Repository of History, Politics, and
Literature Jan - Dec 1779
Hint: It is possible to limit a search in the Milne Library catalog to only
microfilm of materials from a specific time period by using the
Advanced Search form. It is also possible to browse titles in the American
Periodical Series by searching under "American Periodical Series" as a
series.
Newspapers and popular magazines
-
New York Times Archive, 1851-2004 (link on the Milne Library
home page under Databases by name A-Z)
- The New York Times archive provides full page and article images with
searchable full text back to the first issue. It is possible to limit by
article type including: classified ad, display ad, editorial cartoon,
letter, comic, editorial article, review, stock quote, weather, legal
notice, and real estate transaction.
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Reader's Guide Retrospective 1890 - 1982
(link on the Milne Library
home page under Databases by Name A-Z)
- Index to popular magazines and journals. Many of the articles are
available in either print or microfilm format in the Milne Library basement.
Four simultaneous users.
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HarpWeek 1857 - 1865
- HarpWeek is the full text, full-image electronic version
of Harpers Weekly.
-
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The Nation (Digital Archive)
1865 -
- Full text/full image version of The Nation magazine, "a
dissenting, independent, trouble-making, idea-launching
journal of critical opinion".
Searchable by author, keyword, title, date range.
Includes articles, book reviews, film reviews, poems,
cartoons, and illustrations.
-
- International Index to Periodicals, 1907 - 1967 Milne
Library Reference AI 3 R49
- More scholarly than Reader's Guide. Many materials can be obtained through InterLibrary Loan.
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- Poole's Index to Periodical Literature 1802 - 1906 Milne
Library Reference AI 3 P7 1938c
- Can be challenging to use. Many materials can be obtained through InterLibrary Loan.
Newspapers on microfilm can be located by searching the Milne Library
catalog. Hint: Limit the search to Periodicals in the
Advanced Search form.
WorldCAT
in combination with Interlibrary Loan can be used to obtain
newspapers and popular magazines not in Milne Library, particularly if they are available in microfilm
format.
Art/Illustrations
Books provide the best source for reproductions of artwork in Milne Library. When
searching the Library Catalog,
it is useful to have the name of an artist in mind, although keyword
searches may sometimes be effective. Similarly,
WorldCAT can be used to
locate art books not in Milne Library.
Art Index (Milne Library Reference N 1 A 78. 1929 to the
present)
-
Arts and Humanities Search
- A citation index. Citation indexes are useful if you are interested in who
cited a particular work or a listing of cited references from an article.
References to over 1100 arts and humanities sources. Although journals indexed
are from 1980 to the present, it is a good place to find references to older
articles.Topics of the articles range from ancient to modern.
-
-
New York Times Archive, 1851-2004 (link on the Milne Library
home page under Databases by name A-Z)
- The New York Times archive provides full page and article images with
searchable full text back to the first issue. It is possible to limit by
article type including: classified ad, display ad, editorial cartoon,
letter, comic, editorial article, review, stock quote, weather, legal
notice, and real estate transaction.
-
-
HarpWeek 1857 - 1865
- HarpWeek is the full text, full-image electronic version
of Harpers Weekly.
Searches can be limited to advertisements.
The Nation (Digital Archive)
1865 -
- Full text/full image version of The Nation magazine, "a
dissenting, independent, trouble-making, idea-launching
journal of critical opinion".
Searchable by author, keyword, title, date range.
Includes articles, book reviews, film reviews, poems,
cartoons, and illustrations.
Searching Google Images
by artist or subject is another good way to locate reproductions of artwork.
Maps
The best way to locate maps of historical interest available in Milne Library
is to search the catalog for atlases. WorldCat can also be
searched for atlases; however, due to their size and reference use they may be
unavailable through Interlibrary Loan.
There are a large number of sheet maps in the Map Room on the third floor
(mostly recent U.S. government produced maps such as the USGS topographic map
series) There is card catalog in the Map Room (most maps are not included in the
Milne Library online catalog)
The
Perry-Castaņeda Library Map Collection is an outstanding internet source
for historical maps.
In addition to general history sites,
Google
Images can be used to find reproductions of original maps
Government Records
A selection of U.S. government documents is included the Milne Library
catalog. The Milne
Library Government Documents web site has further suggestions.
Access to Archival Databases,
from the U.S. National Archives, has a collection of 50 million historical
documents from 20 different federal agencies.
The University of Michigan has a selection of
Foreign Government
Resources on the Web.
Web sites:
The web can be a good source of primary documents. For
example, the Library of
Congress American Memory project and
American Journeys: Eyewitness
Accounts of Early American Exploration and Settlement have digitized thousands of primary documents including letters, maps,
manuscripts. If you are interested in local history,
Voice of the People: Daily
Life in the Antebellum Delaware County Area has hundreds of primary source
documents available.
- Google
Books can be limited by time period; eg. 1700 - 1790. Since several
large research libraries have been digitized, it is possible to find the
original editions. For example, it is possible to find an original book from
1788: An Essay on Slavery and Commerce of the Human Species by Thomas
Clarkson.
Google (Advanced
Search) can be used to locate primary source materials. It may be
useful to add terms such as primary source, sermon, letters, diaries,
speeches, eyewitness accounts, correspondence, personal narratives, etc. It
also is possible to limit the search by domain name See
Domain name registries around the
world.
Citations/Writing a research paper
Microsoft Office Word 2007 has a tab for managing references including
endnotes, footnotes, and bibliographic citations. Not all types of citation
are included. Although a time-saver, it is advised to check the citations for accuracy.
- Chicago Manual of Style Milne Library
Reference Z 253 U69 2003
-
- History Student Writer's Manual Milne Library
Reference D 13 H4147.1998
- Chapters on writing, paper formats, citing sources, organizing the
research process, library research, web research, book reviews, topical
history papers, biographies and oral history.
Plagiarism
When you use information from a book, article, or web site, don't forget to
cite it in proper fashion! Remember to paraphrase and use your own
language. For further tips see:
Plagiarism-
What It is and How to Recognize and Avoid It
College at Oneonta:
Academic Honesty policy
Turnitin.com
is often used at the College at Oneonta to detect plagiarism.
Need more
help?
Research/Information specialists are available to help you with your research
most hours the library is open. Reference librarians can also be reached by
email ( libref@oneonta.edu. or
http://www.oneonta.edu/library/reference/ask.asp ) or
telephone (607-436-2722). In addition,
Research Consultations (a
link on the Milne Library home page)
are available for in-depth research assistance.
Nancy Cannon (cannonns@oneonta.edu)
OFFICE HOURS by appointment
Milne Library, SUNY College at Oneonta
Last revised January 2008
