Libguides Hist African American History To 1865 Black Health Trauma
This guide was created at Marist College. Please note that some of the resources may not be accessible to non-Marist students. However, many of the links are from freely available websites so you may find this guide helpful. Need some one-on-one help? You can visit the reference desk during reference desk hours. The desk is located on the main floor of Axinn Library and is staffed with faculty librarians who are there to help you with your research questions.
Or you can call the reference desk during reference hours (516-463-5962). Or CHAT WITH A REFERENCE LIBRARIAN. Use the LIVE CHAT pop up box. Or use the ASK US link to submit your question. Zwick, Edward, dir. Glory.
Culver City, CA: Columbia TriStar Home Video, 2007. Videodisc, 124 min. Beresford, Bruce, dir. Roots. 2016; New York, NY: A & E Television Networks. Videodiscs, 383 min.
[Username: UBaltimore; Password: digital] Beresford, Bruce, dir. Roots. 2016; New York, NY: A & E Television Networks. Videodiscs, 383 min. [Username: UBaltimore; Password: digital]
Use DISCOVERY to locate primary source materials. Click on the Books/eBooks tab to start. Use the following databases to locate primary materials Reveal Digital offers six collections of open-access primary source materials from libraries, museums, historical societies and individual collectors. You might want to visit libraries which have collections of manuscripts, papers, organizational records, ephemera or other unpublished materials relating to the people, organizations and agencies involved in the events. These are often original, one-of-a-kind materials.
Click on the link above for Hofstra University's Special Collections department. There are a variety of ways to search for information. How you search is dependent upon what you know about your topic. The box below provides some basic definitions you should become familiar with and then describes the various ways you can search Discovery, the Library catalog or specific databases. Each tool is different but the basic principles of searching will apply to all of these tools. When you know the title or author of the item/s you are searching, you will be doing a known item search.
If you have a topic and you want information on it, you will start by doing a keyword search. A keyword search will help you identify some subject headings that may allow you to focus your topic more clearly. You can then perform a subject heading search. When you want to search across several fields at one time you will want to use the guided or advanced search option. All databases offer a variety of limiters; limiters allow you greater control over your searching. For example.
you may be able to limit by publication date, type of material, or language. Check out the box below for search tips! A keyword is a natural language word that describes a main concept in your topic. Most likely, you will want to search several concepts (keywords) in one search. Keywords can be connected by using search operators AND, OR and NOT. See the keyword tab for more.
Subject headings (sometimes called descriptors) are pre-defined or "controlled vocabulary" words assigned to describe the content of an item in a catalog or database. Clicking on a subject heading in an item record will allow you to locate items with similar or related content. Examples: Diaries, letters, speeches, interviews, eyewitness reports, works of art, novels, poems, photographs, fims, original research) Examples: books and articles that synthesize ideas from primary sources, essay, reviews, etc. Examples: encyclopedia articles, textbooks, indexes, bibliographies Keep in mind that the status of a source as primary or secondary depends on the historical question you are asking.
For example, an article written today about the British homefront during WWI would be considered secondary. However, if this same topic was written about in 1922, it would be considered primary by someone writing about how historians viewed and wrote about the topic. Below are selected websites containing primary source material (some of these sites contain secondary source material as well). Most of the descriptions provided are taken directly from the website and are in quotes. As with any website, you should carefully evaluate the site for quality and credibility. Some of these sites provide a link describing terms of use and how to credit and/or cite materials.
Below is a list of topics to discover on this page. Scroll to view each section and the databases therein or select a link to be taken directly to the section on the page. Uncle Tom's Cabin and American Culture This University of Virginia site explores the effects of this work on American culture Zora Neale Hurston Plays at the Library of Congress "This collection present ten plays written by Hurston (1891-1960), author, anthropologist, and folklorist. Deposited as unpublished typescripts in the United States Copyright Office between 1925 and 1944, most of the plays remained unpublished and unproduced until a manuscript curator rediscovered them in the Copyright Deposit Drama Collection... The plays reflect Hurston's life experience, travels, and research, especially her knowledge of folklore in the African-American South.
Totaling 1,068 images, most of the scripts are housed in the Library's Manuscript Division with one each in the Music and in the Rare Book and Special Collections Divisions. There are four sketches and six full length plays in this group. Previously known mainly for her fiction and autobiography, Hurston here reveals her high ambitions as a dramatist."
People Also Search
- LibGuides: HIST: African American History to 1865: Black Health, Trauma ...
- LibGuides: History: HIST 204: African American History to 1865
- Timeline of African-American history - Wikipedia
- Research Guides: African American Studies *: Primary Sources
This Guide Was Created At Marist College. Please Note That
This guide was created at Marist College. Please note that some of the resources may not be accessible to non-Marist students. However, many of the links are from freely available websites so you may find this guide helpful. Need some one-on-one help? You can visit the reference desk during reference desk hours. The desk is located on the main floor of Axinn Library and is staffed with faculty lib...
Or You Can Call The Reference Desk During Reference Hours
Or you can call the reference desk during reference hours (516-463-5962). Or CHAT WITH A REFERENCE LIBRARIAN. Use the LIVE CHAT pop up box. Or use the ASK US link to submit your question. Zwick, Edward, dir. Glory.
Culver City, CA: Columbia TriStar Home Video, 2007. Videodisc, 124
Culver City, CA: Columbia TriStar Home Video, 2007. Videodisc, 124 min. Beresford, Bruce, dir. Roots. 2016; New York, NY: A & E Television Networks. Videodiscs, 383 min.
[Username: UBaltimore; Password: Digital] Beresford, Bruce, Dir. Roots. 2016; New
[Username: UBaltimore; Password: digital] Beresford, Bruce, dir. Roots. 2016; New York, NY: A & E Television Networks. Videodiscs, 383 min. [Username: UBaltimore; Password: digital]
Use DISCOVERY To Locate Primary Source Materials. Click On The
Use DISCOVERY to locate primary source materials. Click on the Books/eBooks tab to start. Use the following databases to locate primary materials Reveal Digital offers six collections of open-access primary source materials from libraries, museums, historical societies and individual collectors. You might want to visit libraries which have collections of manuscripts, papers, organizational records...