1 / 38

Dr. Glen Harris Ms. Sue Cody codys@uncw.edu

HST 290: Practice of History – Depictions of Miscegenation in Documentaries, Television Shows and Hollywood Films. Dr. Glen Harris Ms. Sue Cody codys@uncw.edu. Your Current R esearch S kills?. How would you rate your current research skills? Strong Satisfactory Needs improvement Poor

abedi
Télécharger la présentation

Dr. Glen Harris Ms. Sue Cody codys@uncw.edu

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. HST 290: Practice of History – Depictions of Miscegenation in Documentaries, Television Shows and Hollywood Films Dr. Glen Harris Ms. Sue Cody codys@uncw.edu

  2. Your Current Research Skills? • How would you rate your current research skills? • Strong • Satisfactory • Needs improvement • Poor • What causes you the most anxiety/confusion/frustration? • What are your favorite sources for historical research?

  3. Our plan for the week • Review Research Guide for this course. • Explore various finding aids. • Learn to identify primary sources. • Become familiar with special services. • Interlibrary Loan • Ask a librarian

  4. Where to get help • Learning Commons Help Desk • In person • Telephone • Email • Chat • Text • By Appointment • Contact me directly: codys@uncw.edu

  5. Finding Articles • Home page Article Search (Integrated search) • Databases A-Z • Individual databases • Databases by Subject • Quick Search (Integrated search) • Individual databases • Citation Searching

  6. Search tips • And, Or, Not • And narrows • Or adds synonyms/related • Not excludes (use carefully) Miscegenation in Film • Miscegenation or? • Film or?

  7. More Search Tips • Truncate for word variations • Film* = film or films or filming or filmmaking • Words anywhere or phrase? • Black Girl or “Black Girl” • Field-specific searches • “Jungle Fever” in title

  8. Database Exploration • Library Homepage Article Search • America: History & Life • Jstor • International Index to Performing Arts • Film Literature Index

  9. Journal Holdings & Access • Follow the citation trail! • Search your citation • Does the library have it? • What format or location? • What online access?

  10. Working from a known citation • Gosselin, Adrienne Johnson. "Racial Etiquette and the (White) Plot of Passing: (Re)Inscribing 'Place' in John Stahl's Imitation of Life." Canadian Review Of American Studies 28, no. 3 (1998): 47. • Roth, Marty. “’Yes, My Darling Daughter’": Gender, Miscegenation, and Generation in John Ford's "The Searchers." New Orleans Review18, n. 4 (1991): 65-73.

  11. Working from a known citation • “Guess Who’s Coming to Dinner” EbonyJanuary 1968. • Heer, David M. “Negro-White Marriage in the United States.” Journal of Marriage and the Family 28 (August 1966): 262-73.

  12. Let’s take a break!

  13. Finding Books • Library Catalog • local & UNCP/FSU • WorldCat • 9,000 libraries / @1.2 billion items • Google Books (@ 12 million / @ 7 million full-text) • Project Gutenberg (@ 33,000 books) • Some databases lead to books • Cited directly • Book reviews

  14. Randall Online Catalog:Keyword vs. Subject Searching • What’s the difference? • What is a useful Subject Heading for Miscegenation and Hollywood? • Start with a keyword search, then look for subjects in the records retrieved.

  15. Keyword/Subject features • Keyword • Finds words anywhere in record. • Look at records to see subject headings. • Search lots of terms, word variations • Subject Headings • Controlled vocabulary • May not be “natural language” but may find more • Hierarchical arrangement helps narrow topic • Searches only the subject field

  16. Suggested Subject Headings • Check headings in records you find by keyword or other searches • Use the LCSH database . • In the catalog, search by any segment of a heading – rotated display • Same terms used in WorldCat

  17. Searching Personal Names • Keyword searches • Either order • Try name variations, e.g., initials • Author/Subject • Last name first, e.g. Lee, Spike

  18. Online Catalog links • Subjects for related items • Call numbers for related items (usually) • Library of Congress outline • http://www.loc.gov/catdir/cpso/lcco/lcco.html • SuDoc arranges by agency • Cover, summary, reviews • Location maps • Expanding search to UNCCLC • Add to Bag/Add to My Lists

  19. Search the Catalog • Check to see what sources Randall Library has on your topic.

  20. Finding Books – LC Call Nos. • Alpha-numeric • Single letters before double • First number is a whole number • Everything after the decimal point is a decimal value.

  21. WorldCat • May find items at Randall that catalog search didn’t (records enhanced later) • Finds items for ILL requests • Rare items not lent • Rare items may be reprinted & available • Websites included – often w/ free access!

  22. Interlibrary Loan • Create an account/create a new account • Username – UNCW domain name • Password – UNCW password

  23. Search • Search for your topic in WorldCat

  24. Secondary - Primary • For Thursday: • Find a relevant secondary source (book or article) with a bibliography. • Review the bibliography to find a primary source. • Copy the page with the primary source citation. • Highlight citation for primary source. • Complete exercise form; attach copy; bring to class.

  25. Next Class • Primary Sources • What they are • How to find them

  26. Questions? What will you do when you have questions?

  27. Ask for help – it’s what we do! codys@uncw.edu kaylorj@uncw.edu http://library.uncw.edu

  28. HST 290: Practice of History – Depictions of Miscegenation in Documentaries, Television Shows and Hollywood Films Dr. Glen Harris Ms. Sue Cody codys@uncw.edu

  29. Primary Sources • Dairies, journals, other writings of “players” • Eyewitness/Observer accounts • Memoirs, autobiographies (written later) • Official documents • Laws, treaties, reports, orders, transcripts of proceedings, addresses, etc. • Advertisements (of the time) • Images • Movies!

  30. Primary or Secondary? • Scholarly article published in 2005 on racial taboos in Guess Who’s Coming to Dinner • Congressional Record explanation of HR 6097, a 1933 bill for supervision of motion pictures. • An encyclopedia of African Americans in motion pictures • An essay by Henry Louis Gates, Jr. entitled “Jungle fever : guess who's not coming to dinner?” published in a 1991 book. • Collection of transcripts of interviews with movie directors • New York Times review of Guess Who’s Coming to Dinner written in 1967. • The movie Jungle Fever

  31. Randall Online Catalog & WorldCat • Search general headings, use indexes • Motion picture producers and director -- interviews • Search specific headings or persons • Stanley Kramer as author (Dkamer, Stanley) • Look for items not tagged as primary source • Primary documents may be included in secondary sources • Eyewitness authors may not be tagged as sources

  32. Randall Online Catalog & WorldCat • Standard Subheadings • Correspondence • Diaries • Interviews • Personal narratives* • Sources • See guide for others

  33. Periodicals and Newspapers • New York Times Archive • Readers’ Guide Retrospective • Humanities and Social Sciences Index Retrospective

  34. Official Documents • Lexis Nexis Academic • Legal • Lexis-Nexis Congressional • HeinOnline • Monthly Catalog of U.S. Government Publications

  35. Digital Collections • See the Research Guide for more!

  36. Bibliographies—Follow the trail • Book-length (Reference Collection) • Secondary sources (books and journal articles) • Types • Classified (easiest to find primary sources) • Alphabetical • Footnotes/Endnotes • What did you find?

  37. Questions? What will you do when you have questions?

  38. Ask for help – it’s what we do! codys@uncw.edu http://library.uncwil.edu/askref.html

More Related