Humanities

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Grand Tour Database from Adam Matthew

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Adam Matthew Primary Source Databases

 

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The Grand Tour

Databases@Emory

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In preparation for Emory's Primary Evidence QEP, the library has just purchased 18 additional primary source databases from the vendor, Adam Matthew, that can be incorporated into course assignments or aid scholars researching a broad array of subjects. 

The Grand Tour database contains accounts of the English abroad, c1550-1850, and serves to highlight the influence of continental travel on 18th century British art, architecture, urban planning, literature and philosophy.  Students can find primary source  (letters; diaries; account books; guidebooks; published travel writing; paintings, drawings; and maps) material to illuminate everyday issues and illustrate larger themes of the age of enlightenment and politics of the day.

  • Explore interactive maps  of 18th century Europe
  • Study photographs of key Grand Tour locations in Florence, Venice, Rome, and Naples
  • Research paintings and sketches inspired from by the Grand Tour, many from the Yale Center for British Art 

Click on the “popular searches” directly below the search box and find topics from Ancient Monuments to Women Writers, as well as pre-set searches on countries, regions, cities/towns, and people.

The database also digitizes the secondary source reference book, A DICTIONARY OF BRITISH AND IRISH TRAVELLERS IN ITALY 1701-1800, with easy to search  biographical entries on grand tourists,  students of the fine arts diplomats, merchants, Jacobite exiles, and British and Irish families already living abroad.  These entries also link directly to images of archive notes, when available, from the Brinsley Ford archive.

There are helpful essays, chronologies, and bibliographies BUT the meat of this database collection is the primary documents and images from impressive archives and museums.  Martha Fogg, Project Editor for The Grand Tour, picks the following three examples to show the range and variety of sources 

  • Susan Horner Collection: Journal, 1861-62 (British Institute, Florence)
  • Joseph Wright of Derby, Vesuvius from Posillipo, c1788 (Yale Center for British Art)
  • Tobias Smollett, Travels through France and Italy, 1766

Take a tour of this database now and remember it when starting an project dealingh with 18th century Europe.

Authored By: 

Kim Collins

Seeking a More Perfect Union: Lincoln Sermons + Digital Tools

Lincoln Logarithms


Can digital tools always make our research more innovative—or sometimes, do they just get in the way?

At DiSC and the Beck Center, we've been mulling over the question of whether the push to "go digital" with a project is always a good thing. Accordingly, we were curious to see what we'd find if we used a bunch of digital text analysis programs, and then we simply read the texts. Would the digital programs offer new insights and save us time? Or would they clutter up an otherwise straighforward textual analysis?

We tested several free, open source tools by using them to analyze  57 sermons given after Lincoln's assassination. The sermons, which are digitized and housed on the Beck Center's website, present the perfect opportunity to experiment with digital analysis.

Did the digital tools pass the test? We arrived at a typical humanities answer: yes and no. You can find detailed results on the project site, which we're calling "Lincoln Logarithms: Finding Meaning in Sermons." The tools we employed— Voyant, Viewshare, PaperMachines, and MALLET—quickly offered us some potential research questions and highlighted places and subjects that we might look at more closely.

Perhaps most enticingly, the programs "read" the 57 sermons (comprised of 1672 pages and 481,575 words) in mere seconds. Reading them was more tedious; in fact, no one on our team made it through all of them. In this case, I think that actually reading the texts—even just a portion of them—was more valuable than looking at the digital tools' output.

Digital tools can help us hone in on what questions to ask. They are a way to help us arrive at questions and results, but they aren't results.

Authored By: 

Sarita Alami is a Graduate Fellow at DiSC.

Are digital tools always the best answer? A collection of sermons given after Lincoln's assassination helps us find out.

Miniature Artist's Book: New Orleans Lexicon by Jill Timm

New Orleans Lexicon, Jill Timm

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To commemorate Fat Tuesday, I want to highlight an artist's book in MARBL, Jill Timm's New Orleans Lexicon. Timm, who got her start making miniature books, created New Orleans Lexicon after visiting the city to attend a Conclave of the Miniature Book Society. The book is 2.25 inches tall and about 3 inches wide. It does not resemble a book so much as a case with twelve folders in the Mardi Gras colors. Ten of these folders contain cards with definitions of words and phrases commonly used in the Crescent City. Each card also has a photograph or illustration made from plastic, cutouts, feathers, and beads. MARBL has one of only 25 copies of this book. New Orleans Lexicon was published under Mystical Places Press, which Timm established in 1998. MARBL possesses over thirty of Timm's books, many of them exquisite and beautiful miniatures.

New Orleans Lexicon will be a part of The Artists' Books Showcase, a digital exhibition highlighting pieces in MARBL's vast collection of artists' books. The exhibition is expected to go live in the spring of 2013.

Authored By: 

Catherine E. Doubler, Robert W. Woodruff Library Fellow and Doctoral Candidate in English

E-Resource Spotlight: Adam Matthew Primary Source Databases

Image © Adam Matthew 2013


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Adam Matthew Digital

Databases @ Emory

 

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Emory Libraries is pleased to announce the purchase of eighteen databases from Adam Matthew Digital, a company that specializes in primary source materials in the humanities and social sciences. These eighteen databases are particularly strong in the areas of medieval history and culture, government documents from the United Kingdom, Asian history and culture, and women’s studies. Adam Matthew databases are composed of digitizations of well-known archives and print collections. One new database, China: Culture and Society, draws from the pamphlets in the Charles W. Wason Collection on East Asia at Cornell University; The American West database contains digitizations of manuscripts, periodicals, and images from the Everett D. Graff collection at the Newberry Library in Chicago. Many of the databases also contain scholarly essays, timelines, and maps that curate the primary source materials within.

Over the next few weeks, several subject librarians will be publishing additional blog posts to further highlight one of these fantastic new databases. We believe that these new online collections will be especially useful for faculty and graduate student research.

The eighteen databases are:

The American West

The American West is a digital collection of rare manuscripts, ephemeral material, and printed sources from the Everett D. Graff Collection of Western Americana at the Newberry Library of Chicago. The collection includes zoomable maps, notable manuscript collections such as the papers of James Audubon, city directories and prospectuses, and other sources that document the history of Native Americans, explorers, pioneers, agriculture, the Mormon exodus, and Wild West shows. The collection is indexed by title, author, date, format, theme, region, names and subjects. 

China: Culture and Society

China: Culture and Society is a digital collection of extremely rare pamphlets from Cornell University Library’s Charles W. Wason Collection on East Asia. The pamphlets cover speeches, guides, reports, essays, catalogues, magazine articles, and other material addressing Chinese history, culture, and everyday life. The resource is full-text searchable, allowing for the collection to be comprehensively explored and studied. The wide variety of research interests and themes covered by the pamphlets include education, emigration, the foreign presence, missionaries, wars, rebellion, reform, opium, healthcare and language.

Confidential Print: North America, 1824-1961

Confidential Print North America is a digital collection of British Foreign and Colonial Office files from the National Archives at Kew. Documents include reports, dispatches, weekly political summaries, and monthly economic reports pertaining to the United States, Canada, the Caribbean and Central America. The database is indexed and is full-text searchable. It forms part of the Adam Matthew's Archives Direct collection of British National Archives records.

Confidential Print: Africa, 1834-1966

Confidential Print: Africa provides scholars with electronic access to the United Kingdom’s Colonial, Dominion and Foreign Offices’ confidential correspondence relating to Africa between 1834 and 1966. This resource will provide researchers with a searchable collection of scores of official documents covering almost the entire period of European conquest and colonization of Africa. The early stages of imperial expansion and indigenous resistance in the interior of western and southern Africa, the European scramble for the continent in the late nineteenth century, and the expansion of settler colonialism in southern and eastern Africa are all covered, as are the rising challenges to imperialism in the twentieth century that culminated in the rapid European withdrawal from the continent in the 1950s and 1960s.

Confidential Print: Latin America, 1833-1969

The documents of Confidential Print: Latin America are the full text records of the British Foreign Office, which cover the whole of South and Central America, plus the non-British islands of the Caribbean, from just after the final Spanish withdrawal from mainland America in the 1820s to the height of the Cold War in the 1960s. Covering revolutions, territorial changes and political movements, foreign financial interests, industrial and infrastructural development (including the building of the Panama Canal), wars, slavery, immigration from Europe and relations with indigenous peoples, amongst other topics, the files in this title form a vital resource for any scholar of Latin American history in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries.

Defining Gender, 1450-1910

Defining Gender is a collection of original source materials from British and European archives. Documents from 21 libraries are thematically organized by areas: Conduct and Politeness, Domesticity and the Family, Consumption and Leisure, Education and Sensibility, and The Body. The documents were selected by academic, consultant editors, who have contributed essays to the area sections, which relate directly to the source material. Manuscripts, printed works, and illustrations address key issues from both feminine and masculine perspectives.

Eighteenth Century Journals V

This portal to newspapers and periodicals provides full-text access to rare British newspapers and periodicals from the 17th and 18th centuries. Section V offers a complete run of one of the greatest periodicals of the age, The Lady's Magazine (1770 to 1832), as well as other relevant titles from the period.

Foreign Office Files for China, 1949-1980

The Foreign Office Files for China, 1949-1980, is a digitized collection of the British Foreign Office files dealing with China, Hong Kong and Taiwan, specifically, the complete FO 371 and FCO 21 files from The National Archives, Kew. The files include eye-witness accounts and detailed reports on life in China, in depth analysis of the Communist Revolution and all the major figures, and material on the Korean War, the Cold War, US relations, and the Cultural Revolution.

Global Commodities: Trade, Exploration and Cultural Exchange

The Global Commodities database provides primary source materials arranged around fifteen major trade goods from world history such as chocolate, coffee, cotton, and opium. Each commodity is documented through a wide range of manuscript materials, maps, posters, paintings, photographs, ephemera, objects, and rare books so that the scholar can explore the origins of the commodity, their first uses, the trade that developed and the ways in which these items were marketed and consumed. The project touches on themes of exploration and discovery; imperialism and colonialism; trade wars; translocation and economic geography; slavery; taste; and the evolution of global branding. 

The Grand Tour

The Grand Tour was a rite-of-passage for many aristocratic and wealthy young men of the eighteenth century (1701-1800). This database contains primary source letters; diaries and journals; account books; printed guidebooks; published travel writing; paintings and sketches; architectural drawings; and maps that illustrate the everyday issues of transportation, money, communications, food and drink, health, and sex, as well as European political and religious life. The architecture, street life and urban planning of cities such as Paris, Rome, Florence and Geneva are highlighted.

Mass Observation Online

Mass Observation Online: British Social History, 1937-1972 from the University of Sussex incudes material divided into two main types: material collected by investigators and that collected by volunteers. The first type includes surveys, collections of emphemera, accounts of ‘overheards’ and covert observations of the general public, while the volunteer material is personal accounts of individual lives provided by the amateur observers from MO’s ‘National Panel’. The database includes File Reports, 1937-1972 on topics such as popular culture, consumerism, branding and fashion, sex, marriage, and the family, as well as attitudes to war, politics and America, Russia, and Europe. There are also MO publications, diaries, directives, and full color digital images.

Medieval Family Life

The Medieval Family Life database contains the only 5 major letter collections from fifteenth-century England, the Paston, Stonor, Cely, Plumpton, and Armburgh Papers. The Paston letters document the life of a gentry family during the War of the Roses. The Celys were a merchant family in the wool trade and collections contains commercial dealings for both the economic and social historians. Plumptons documents continue through to the early 16th century, and Armburgh family material is primarily concerned with a dispute over a family inheritance. It includes both the original medieval manuscripts and transcripts, as well as family trees, a chronology, a glossary, a and an interactive map.

Medieval Travel Writing

This database presents manuscripts of European travel writing dating from the 13th to the 16th centuries culled from libraries around the world. It covers geography, exploration, trade, literature, and the new field of medieval postcolonial studies. The chief focus is on journeys to central Asia and the Far East, including accounts of travel to Mongolia, Persia, India, China, and South-East Asia, as well as travel to the Holy Land. The original documents are in a range of languages, including French, Latin, German, Spanish, Dutch and English, so supporting secondary texts of translations and editions are included. There is also a gallery of maps and images, a bibliography and chronology, and a slideshow.

Meiji Japan

A collection of the personal and professional papers of Edward Sylvester Morse, a zoologist and author of various works related to Japan. Having initially traveled to Japan in 1877 to study brachiopods, Morse introduced modern aspects of biology and zoology to Japan and developed an interest in Japanese ethnology and archaelogy, collecting pottery and artifacts and keeping detailed notes on his observations of daily life. The papers, digitized by the Peabody Essex Museum, include his diaries, travel journals, correspondence, lectures, drawings, and numerous other types of documents.

The Nixon Years, 1969-1974

The Nixon Years is a digital collection of Foreign and Commonwealth Office (FCO) Files 7 and 82 from the British National Archives at Kew. It covers Nixon’s handling of numerous Cold War crises, his administrations achievements, and his use of executive powers culminating in Watergate from a British, European and Commonwealth perspective. Documents in the collection are full-text searchable and are indexed by notable people, places, and topics.

Travel Writing, Spectacle and World History

This database contains primary source accounts by women of their travels across the globe from the early 19th century to the late 20th century. Documents span from 1818-1970 and cover topics such as: architecture; art; the British Empire; climate; customs; exploration; family life; housing; industry; language; monuments; natural history; politics; race; religion; science; and war. Maps explore destinations and travel routes. All documents come from the Arthur and Elizabeth Schlesinger Library (Radcliffe Institute, Harvard University).

Victorian Popular Culture IV: Moving Pictures, Optical Entertainments and the Advent of Cinema 

Victorian Popular Culture describes popular entertainment in America, Britain, and Europe in the period from 1779 to 1930 and shows how interconnected these worlds were. The fourth section explores the pivotal era in entertainment history when previously static images came to life and moved for the first time.

Women in the National Archives 

Women in the National Archives is part of Archives Direct and is comprised of two elements: “A Finding Aid to Women’s Studies Resources in the National Archives at Kew” and “Original Documents on the Suffrage Question in Britain, the Empire, and Colonial Territories.” The Finding Aid is a detailed analysis, on an item basis, of the holdings of the National Archives on the subject of women from c1559 – 1995. The second part of the resource is the collection of original documents, particularly relating to “The Campaign for Women’s Suffrage in Britain, 1903 – 1928” and “The granting of women’s suffrage in Colonial territories, 1930 – 1963.”

Authored By: 

Catherine E. Doubler, Robert W. Woodruff Library Fellow and Doctoral Candidate in English

Win $500 for your Research Project


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The Robert W. Woodruff Library invites undergraduates to submit a research project for consideration for the 2013 Undergraduate Research Awards!

The Undergraduate Research Award recognizes and rewards Emory College undergraduate students who make extensive use of Woodruff Library’s collections and research resources in their original scholarship while simultaneously showing evidence of critical analysis in their research skills. There will be up to three awards of $500 made this year, and at least one will be made to a first-year student.

To be eligible, research projects must have been completed since March 1, 2012. So many projects from Spring 2012 and all of those from Fall 2012 can be included. Projects in all media are encouraged.

In addition to the final version of the research project, students will submit a short (500-750 word) essay describing their research strategies, an abstract of the project, and a bibliography of sources used. Finally, there must be a letter of support from the faculty member who supervised the project.

The due date for all of these materials is 5pm on Wednesday, March 6, 2013. But don't let that let you procrastinate on the process.

Atlanta Studies Meet Up: Feb 7th at Manuel’s

 


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Join us for the first Atlanta Studies Meet Up!  These quarterly meetings will showcase 2 Atlanta focused projects and bring together a group of folks interested in our city. We will provide a few snacks.  Buy your own drinks.

When: 6:30 on Thursday, February 7th

Where: Manuel’s Tavern, 602 N. Highland Avenue

Presentations:

Hannah Palmer will present a mapping project created from her research on places destroyed by Atlanta’s airport.  Her book, “I’m From Here,” is about going home again, or what’s left of it. A work of creative nonfiction, the book combines memoir and investigative journalism to tell the story of her hometown, Mountain View, Georgia, and other erased places surrounding Atlanta’s Hartsfield-Jackson International Airport, the “busiest airport in the world.” Many of the locations explored and documented in the book have been nearly erased from existence, so she created a map.

Michael Page and Randy Gue will present on a project at Emory’s Digital Scholarship Commons (DiSC) to create an application similar to Google Maps for Atlanta from the late 1920s through the early 1950s. Based on the 1928 city atlas, the tool will assign addresses and map all of the 250,000 building footprints in Atlanta and its environs in 1930. Users will ultimately be able to add layers and tag attributes to a series of addresses in the historic city. This combination of GIS technology and unique datasets will change the way Jim Crow Atlanta is studied by allowing researchers to visualize social changes over time.

Michael Page is the geospatial Librarian at Emory University, and Randy Gue is the Curator of Modern Political and Historical Collections at Emory’s Manuscript Archive and Rare Book Library.

The Plan:

6:30 – Grab some snacks (we will provide a few) and order a drink (that’s on you)

7:00 – Presentations and Q&A

8:00 – Networking, chit chatting, order another drink

Organized by: Emory’s Digital Scholarship Commons and Georgia State University’s ATLmaps group.

The Atlanta Studies Network connects scholars, activists and residents with one another around a shared interest in Atlanta. It highlights projects and events around town and around the web that deepen our understanding of the social, cultural and historical fabric of the city. It also strives to incubate and facilitate collaborations between individuals and institutions.

New Database: Entertainment Industry Magazine Archive

Movie theater. Southside, Chicago, Illinois. (1941) Image courtesy of Library of Congress


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The Entertainment Industry Magazine Archive (Proquest) offers full runs of key trade and consumer magazines in film, broadcasting, popular music and theater, including Variety and Billboard. It contains detailed indexing of entire issues (including ads), full color page reproductions and full-text search capability.

Variety in particular is a heavily cited entertainment industry trade journal, but before now has not been readily available for online access for the years before the 1990s. Currently the coverage for Variety in this database runs from 1951-1975, with more years to be added in the coming months. LexisNexis Academic Universe offers full text access from 1993 to the present. For coverage in other databases, see the ejournals@Emory entry for Variety

Authored By: 

James Steffen, Film and Media Studies Librarian

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