Women and Social Movements in the United States 1600-2000, Scholar’s Edition
SUNY Binghamton’s Center for the Historical Study of Women and Gender and publisher Alexander Street Press are offering one month’s free access to their extensive digital archive collection in honor of Women’s History Month. This free preview which lets you use the colection’s, “91 document projects and archives with more than 3,600 documents and 150,000 pages of additional full-text documents, and more than 2,060 primary authors” for the entire month of March.
Use the link above to access the database and, of course, let me know what you think about it!
The Wilson Center is, right at this moment, running a live webcast of its panel discussion of KGB officer turned journalist Alexander Vassiliev’s newly released notebooks. Drawn from the KGB archives, these notebooks offer an unprecedented look into Soviet espionage activities in the US from 1930-1950. Some topics discussed will be Alger Hiss, and I.F. Stone.
The webcast is available here. The agenda is available here (PDF).
English language translations of the notebooks (now held by the Library of Congress) and available as PDFs here.
As part of it’s very interesting “Remade in America: The Newest Immigrants and their Impact” series, the New York Times has put up a fascinating interactive map that displays the country of origin for the foreign-born population by county.
This is pretty cool in itself but the demographics fun is multiplied when you notice the slider that lets you look at the map using data from every census back to 1880. Want to see how the population of your home county has changed over the last 128 years? Just move the slider and watch the color coding shift. Want to see where people from a particular county settled, and when? Just choose one of the countries a drop-down menu and you can see what counties they settled in. Sadly the list of countries isn’t very long but does cover the most common countries of origin.
A mouse-over of the county will cause the county, it’s number of foreign-born residents, and total population — all for the selected census–to be identified in a bubble.
New York Times–Immigration Explorer
The New York Times has an interesting web feature up right now that presents a timeline of all of the presidential Inaugural addresses from 1789 on. While that is pretty useful in itself, this site is particularly interesting because it shows you a tag cloud of the frequently used words in each speech. It’s a great way to quickly survey the changing language and themes.
The page is available here: Inaugural Words: 1789 to the Present.
The Law Library has just added two new databases which can also be useful for History and Political Science.
The Making of the Modern World: The Goldsmiths’-Kress Library of Economic Literature provides full-text access to the contents of two important collections of business and economics books and periodicals published between 1450 and 1850. 61,000 books and 466 periodicals are digitally reproduced covering subjects as diverse as commerce, trade, finance, politics, colonization, slavery, law, and history.
The Economist Historical Archive provides the full-text of The Economist magazine from 1843 up through five years from the present. Covering world politics, business, technology, science and culture this archive is an important resource for contemporary views of issues from the 19th and 20th centuries. This database includes The Economist’s frequent special topic issues and supplements and the magazine’s articles, tables, photographs, ads, and maps are all fully searchable. An exciting new feature is the ability to export many of the tables and charts to external applications for use in your projects.
You can access these databases from the links above or via the Find Databases/Journal Articles link on the Drexel University Libraries homepage.
As always, I am happy to help anyone explore how to use these resources for your own projects.