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South Asian Studies programs at Emory
- Asian
Studies, Middle
East and South Asian Studies and West and South Asian Studies
- Departmental and program websites.
- Major subject areas being researched and taught by Emory faculty
- Custom searches of the EUCLID catalog for recent
acquisitions in the major subject areas. Contact me to
request new acquisitions in any medium.
- Course Guides in South Asian Studies at Emory
- Religious
Transformation in Colonial India (2001)
Seminar
on the Puranas (2002)
- From Gandhi to Google (2007)
Psychoanalysis
and the Religious Cultures of South Asia (2007)
Directory of Resources
(See also review below of Research and Writing Tools,
esp. Search Engines)
- Anthropology and ethnography
- Human
Relations Area Files is an online database of ethnographic material and other texts indexed by culture
and subject. It is useful to scholars focusing on comparative
research, for example, anthropology of religion.
- Archives
- Guide to collections of original and reproduced,
published and unpublished primary sources.
- Atlanta
Area Associations and Events
- See also Khabar .
-
- Bibliographies
- How to find comprehensive and specialized monographic
and serial bibliographies at Emory and on the internet.
Try Endnote (Emory supported) or Zotero (web interface) to gather and store digital materials.
- Biographical
Dictionaries and Encyclopedias
- See also international biographical reference works
like these online
databases.
- Conferences
and Proceedings
- This general guide works for South Asian materials too.
- Current Awareness or Alert Services
- Obtain email or rss notices about new books, journal tables of contents, database
updates, and more. Sources relevant
to South Asian Studies that have alert services include
the journal Modern Asian Studies, Asia Society, Asian Studies WWW Monitor, Journal of the AAR, InformaWorld, IngentaConnect, indology blogs, and most of the major distributors of books published in South Asia. Google Alerts will email updates to your own Google searches. Social bookmarking sites like del.icio.us and citeulike will send updates via rss for tags you
select. Finally, join one of the field's major listservs.
- Databases (online indexes of citations or full-text articles)
- See the guide to Journal
Articles for general tips. Among databases licensed by Emory, try first the Bibliography of Asian Studies, Most other comprehensive online databases like Academic Search Premier in the Database Locator will generate useful results. For a quick "federated" search of multiple databases
at once, try GALILEO's QuickSearch. Beyond Emory, search the South Asia Research Documentation Services database (about 70,000 citations from 1797-2006). For reviews, see the note below.
- Dissertations
and theses (a custom search of EUCLID for those produced at Emory on India)
- Also consult Emory's Electronic Theses and Dissertations site to search electronic versions of Emory theses and
dissertations. For theses produced in North America and
parts of Europe, use Dissertation
Abstracts. For India, use Vidyanidhi.
- Directory of scholars in the field
- Also try a Google search of faculty in South Asian studies at .edu sites or the American Academy of Religion or Association of Asian Studies membership directories (available only to members)
- Hartford Seminar Collection
at Pitts Theology Library
- 250,000 volumes supported the Seminary's program of
training missionaries for work overseas, including South
Asia. Many are not cataloged online; check the card
catalog at the Theology Library.
- Images
- See also the American
Council for Southern Asian Art for bibliographies,
a color slide project, a microfiche archive and other
outreach materials. Recently, the ACSAA collection was
acquired by ArtStor.
- Indian Americans
- Try this EUCLID
search for a list of literary works, ethnographies,
videos, government docs, histories, bibliographies, sociological
studies, psychological studies, and more.
- Journals and Newspapers
- Current, lapsed, and ceased journals published in or
about South Asia and available at Emory or through our
online licenses. For newspapers online, see our indexes
and full-text databases, esp. Ethnic
NewsWatch for those published for and by South Asians
in the US. For Atlanta, see Khabar. Also see International Union List of South Asian Newspapers and Gazettes. For online newspapers, see the Internet Public Library list.
- Languages and literature
- Apart from South
Asian authors writing in English, we systematically acquire items
in the following South Asian languages.
Sanskrit : (including
the Daniel H.H. Ingalls Sanskrit Library) See also the Language Center's Sanskrit page and Google "sanskrit text TEI" for sanskrit texts encoded following the
Text Encoding Initiative standards.
Tibetan :
See also the Emory Tibet Digital Library and the Language Center's Tibetan page
Hindi :
See also the Language Center's Hindi page
We acquire items in Bengali
and other languages on an ad hoc basis.
To find citations to individual works, try the online
indexes; for full texts online, try Literature
Online (English only) and Online
Books.
- Library Instruction
- Take our online
tutorial or contact me for individual or class instruction
in how to find resources at Emory and beyond.
- Listservs
- Major listservs for scholars in the field are RISA-L,
Indology,
and H-Asia.
They often will respond to requests for help on research
topics.
- Maps
- Digital and print materials. The library's Data
Center now supports GIS software if you want to manipulate
digital
map data.
- Movies
- Books on the subject as well as videocassettes, dvd's,
and vcd's.
- Music
- Books and recordings.
- Reference Works on South Asia
- Good starting point for
basic research. Historical, geographical, and cultural
dictionaries, encyclop(a)edias, or gazetteers. See also
works of broader scope online as well as works of narrower scope on geographical area (e.g., Bangladesh) or subject matter (e.g., women in South Asia). Also see review articles.
- Resource
Guides at Other University Libraries
- Google search results. See also Columbia University's
list
of major collections around the world or Google this search phrase: ("south asia" OR "south asian")
collection
- Reviews
- To find articles that review a book or literature in general on a subject, try
Google or Google Scholar (put the title in quotes and
add the word review). Also try the Book
Review category in Databases@Emory to search licensed databases. Finally, try comprehensive
journal databases.
- Statistics
- Print and online materials with comprehensive or specialized
data on India or South Asia. Also check the general online
statistical databases.
- Tibet
- Emory
Tibet Digital Library is a developing site with thousands of Tibetan language classic texts. See also
Emory's Dalai Lama site and Emory Tibet Partnership site.
- Vendors
- Publishers and distributors of publications from South
Asia.
Research and Writing Tools
Most
common tools apply to South Asian Studies. See Emory's
Writing Center handouts for basic guidance. For bibliographic management (organization and generation
of references), Emory supports Endnote. Search engines are central to research across disciplines, but a
few comments relevant to research in South Asian Studies
might be useful.
Search
Engines
Searching
at this stage of the digital evolution is still not a
seamless or integrated process. Not everything is digitized.
Whatever is digitized is not necessarily in a standard
format. Keyword searches without knowing the appropriate
scholarly vocabulary or context can be misleading. Rresearchers
need to be agile -- ready, for example, to step back
and find the standard vocabulary for a topic (e.g., from reference works), to move sideways from one search engine to another (e.g., with LibX), to follow LC subject heading links or citation links or "related record" links, to change formats (e.g., look for reviews as well as articles and monographs), to cross disciplinary boundaries (e.g.,
search psychology, economics, social science, business
and science databases), and even to go offline to look
at works available only in print (e.g., bibliographies). Here are some tips.
- Install
the Firefox plug-in LibX to search EUCLID (or WorldCat or Google or Google Scholar) on the title, author,
isbn or keyword in any web page and to link directly
from citations in Google from Emory-licensed databases
to the full record. Useful to find books and articles
on the fly, as well as tables of contents, synopses
and reviews.
- Google
- To restrict
searches to educational sites, add site:.edu
to your search phrase
- Embedded
below is a Google Custom Search Engine that searches
only selected websites relevant to South Asian
studies. Site suggestions welcome. Includes the
following categories.
- College
and University sites
- Book
and/or Video vendor sites: good for contents
and synopses of recent publications
- Governmental
and non-governmental organization sites
- Go where Google cannot
follow
- Search EUCLID
to find unique materials or cataloging notes
not found on Google. Here are tips for searching for South Asian materials.
- Search Databases@Emory
for licensed materials not indexed on Google;
esp. the Bibliography of Asian Studies for citations from South Asia-focused publications and comprehensive databases
like Academic Search Premier or GALILEO's QuickSearch for a more panoramic exploration.
- Search OAIster to
access digitized archives in a format not searchable
by Google
- Search South
Asian Studies listserv archives. You may have
to join RISA-L, Indology, and H-Asia to search their archives.
- Look also
at the list of Asian Studies search engines compiled by T. Matthew Ciolek.
- Many South
Asia items from the Hartford collection can only be found in the card catalog at Pitts.
- Reference
Finder: If you are writing a paper or have an article for which you want to find addditional
resources, try this tool. You paste up to 8 pages
of text into the box and it instantly pulls out a
list of keywords which you can edit and then automatically
have inserted into any of the major search engines
to find related stuff.
- Online directories which
offer organized categories of resources may sometimes
be more efficient than using search engines. This guide
itself includes a directory and like all directories
has its peculiarities and limitations. Try also these
major directories cataloged in EUCLID, as well as Intute and Academic Info.
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© Emory University Libraries - 540 Asbury Circle, Atlanta, Georgia 30322 |
Updated:
May 23, 2008
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