HY 274 Middle Ages: the Making of Europe

Interdisciplinary Programs Liaison Librarian

Library Research Guide

Library instruction provided for Professor Carol Neel’s Block 3, 2008 class.

Today’s techniques to practice:

Finding Web Sources

The Labyrinth: Resources for Medieval Studies sponsored by Georgetown University

ORB: On-line Reference Book for Medieval Studies

Finding Primary Sources

A Colorado College student fhow to find primary sources.

See Finding Primary Sources for terms to search and for other ideas to identify primary sources on your topic.

Search Tiger Catalog and Prospector.

Search Google and maybe Google Books but not GoogleScholar.

Finding Books

Search TIGER for

Try searching “church AND state AND France” in KEYWORD search to find books on church and state relations in France in various time periods.

Try searching “Church and State France History 19th Century” in SUBJECT search.

Finding Journal Articles

Google Scholar

Academic Search Premier
Coverage: 1988 - current
Provides access to basic journal index and some full text resources. Subject coverage is general and broad. Shows CC holdings.
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JSTOR
Coverage: late 1800's - most recent 5 years
Archival access to many scholarly periodicals. Jstor does not cover the most recent three years of most journals.
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Historical Abstracts
Coverage: 1967 - current
Covers world history.
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Feminae
Coverage: 1995 - current
The Medieval Feminist Index covers journal articles, book reviews, and essays in books about women, sexuality, and gender during the Middle Ages.

Finding Journal Articles in Subject Specific Databases

Try searching a subject specific database from Religion Databases for more articles from individual disciplines.

For example, try searching ATLA Religion Database With ATLASerials listed under Religion Databases for the topic “franciscan* and (poor or poverty)”.

Finding Full Text Versions of Articles

When searching article indexing databases, sometimes the full text of the article you need is not provided to you by the database. Or you have identified a citation in a bibliography or footnote and need to find the full text. There are two ways of finding the full text of any article that you need.

  1. Check Find Journals to see if Tutt Library subscribes to an electronic version of your journal or magazine or if we own databases which may have your article in full text. Find Journals a.k.a Tutt Link is available next to the citations in most of our databases and in GoogleScholar.
  1. Request an ILLiad/Interlibrary Loan of your article directly from your database (use button or hotlink) or log into ILLiad and fill out an Interlibrary Loan Request Form. (Articles can come in as few as 24-48 hours.) You must be registered with ILLiad for either method to work – see First Time User Registration for Interlibrary Loan.

Citing Your Sources

How to Cite Sources?

Gibaldi, Joseph. MLA handbook for writers of research papers: New York : MLA, 2003.
PE1478 .M57 2003 (1st Floor North-Ref Desk, 1st Floor North-Reference, Permanent Reserves – Circ, Tutt North Basement)

Managing Your Bibliography

RefWorks training every Wed. 1 p.m. @Tutt Library.

Additional Assistance

Contact Reference Desk, 9 a.m. – 10 p.m., x6662, IM=tuttlibrarian

Contact Krystyna Mrozek, Interdisciplinary Programs Librarian, x6669, Tutt Library 201, kmrozek@coloradocollege.edu, IM=tuttkrystyna

Last revised, 11-06-08, km.

Hours

Today: 12:00pm-8:00pm

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