
Tercia
Matthei Imago
[Rationarium
evangelistarum]; Hexastichon Sebastiani Brant in memorabiles
evangelistarum figures.
Pforzheim, Thomas Anselm, 1504.
(Call
number: 879P49 Ka; Available in Special
Collections, Northwestern University Library)
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Sessions Handouts |
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Breakout
Sessions
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Bodies,
Genders, and Beyond: Electronic Resources for Gender Studies
Presenters: Denise
Shorey, Head, Reference
Department; Kristine
Thorsen, Lecturer in German Department
Handout 
Web site < http://pubweb.northwestern.edu/~dms410/bodies.html>
This workshop session will focus on
the broad spectrum of resources including full texts, abstracts,
directories, and other electronic material available to students
whose investigations lead them to study women and men, gender and
sexuality, and issues of cultural identity and sexual politics.
In addition to suggesting effective search strategies and optimal
electronic resources for initiating an investigation or research
project, the workshop will also treat specialized resources in
the humanities and the social sciences depending upon participants'
interests. |
Electronic
Resources for the Study of the Medieval World
Presenters: William
McHugh, Reference Collection Management Librarian; Susan
Phillips, Assistant Professor of English
McHugh's handout 
The instructors
will introduce students to electronic resources central to the
study of medieval European religion, history, culture, and literature.
Among the resources to be discussed will be the International
Medieval Bibliography, In Principio, Early English
Books Online (EEBO), and the Middle English Compendium.
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English
and American Studies I: The 16th to the 18th Centuries
Presenters: Charlotte
Cubbage, Bibliographer for American, English, and Comparative
Literatures; Ethan
Shagan, Associate Professor of History
Cubbage's
handout 
This session will focus upon a variety
of resources for the study of Britain and America. Among the resources
included will be Early English Books Online (EEBO), a
large-scale digitization project for pre-1700 British publications;
the English Short Title Catalogue, a bibliographic resource
for identifying published materials through the eighteenth century;
the Eighteenth Century Collections Online (ECCO) and Evans
Digital Editions (Series I of Early American Imprints) two
other large-scale full-text digitization projects. |
English
and American Studies II: The Long 19th Century in History and
Literature
Presenters: Charlotte
Cubbage, Bibliographer for American, English, and Comparative
Literatures; Carl
Smith, Professor of English, American Studies, and History
Cubbage's
handout 
Professor
Smith's handout 
This session will discuss online materials
for the study of England and the United States, especially the
latter, from the late eighteenth to the early twentieth century.
It will emphasize both bibliographical and related research resources
(including several excellent resources with user fees to which
Northwestern subscribes and so are available without charge to
our graduate students) and a range of primary source repositories
(textual, numerical, and visual) of different kinds. |
The
Gist of GIS
Presenters: Beth
Clausen, Head, Government Publications & Maps
Department; Juan
Onesimo Sandoval, Assistant Professor of Sociology
Clausen's handout 
Geographic Information Systems (GIS)
technology is being used in research, teaching, and for practical
applications across a very wide range of social science and humanities
disciplines. This session introduces students to the data, software
and other GIS resources available in the library to the Northwestern
University community. Instructors will demonstrate GIS by showing
the steps involved with GIS and how it is used in the research
of one NU faculty member. |
Humanities
Computing Testbed
Presenters: Ruth
Reingold, Assistant Dean for Computing Technology, WCAS; Claire
Stewart, Head, Digital
Media Services; Oliver
Haynold, Graduate Student, History/German Literature
Humanities
Computing Testbed Blog
<http://www.library.northwestern.edu/blog/humcomp/>
This session will introduce attendees to the Humanities Computing Testbed. This
service, jointly sponsored by Weinberg and
the University Library, is
housed within Digital
Media Services, 2East, University Library. Students can bring technology-based
projects at any stage of development, from concept to production; to the testbed
in search of advice, support, training and other development assistance. Testbed
partners will draw upon the existing technical infrastructure in DMS and involve
subject and technology experts from the library and university technology units
as additional collaborators. A Humanities graduate student will also be available
to assist. |
Introduction
to Social Science Data Services (SSDS)
Presenters:
Ann
Janda, Data Services Consultant; Christopher
Taber, Associate Professor of Economics
Janda's
handout 
Social
Science Data Services (SSDS) provides access to thousands of numeric computer data files which
are used for secondary analysis in the social sciences. Most of
these files are acquired from the Inter-University Consortium for
Political and Social Research (ICPSR) and the Roper Center for
Public Opinion Research. Participants in this session will be introduced
to, among other things, the technical consulting, access and documentation
services which are provided for these data files, as well as the
role that raw data analysis plays in research and teaching at Northwestern
University. |
Philosophy
and Social / Political Theory
Presenters: Tom Mann,
Bibliographer for Anthropology, Sociology, German and Slavic Literatures; Terry
Pinkard, Professor of Philosophy and German
Web
site
<http://www.library.northwestern.edu/collections/sept2004/phil_soc_poli_theory.html>
Electronic
databases provide faster and more detailed searching capabilities within
disciplines, but
they also enhance the interdisciplinary connections which expand
the breadth of information distribution. This session will be a
presentation of online resources which are essential for research
in the disciplines of Philosophy and Social/Political Theory. The
instructors will demonstrate how to search for electronic resources
and explain how to analyze and utilize the information resources
contained in these online databases, from the perspectives of a
librarian and of a scholar. Some of the primary resources include: Philosopher’s
Index, Past Masters, International Political
Science Abstracts, and Worldwide Political Science Abstracts.
Various other online resources, which are accessible from the Library’s
website, will also be surveyed. |
Resources
for the Study of Drama and Theatre
Presenters: Rochelle
Elstein, Bibliographer for Religion, Jewish Studies, Journalism,
Dance, Performance Studies, Radio/Television/ Film, Theatre,
and Communication Studies; Tracy
C. Davis, Professor of Theatre, English, and Performance
Studies, and Director, Interdisciplinary Ph.D. in Theatre and
Drama
Elstein's
Dance web site
<http://www.library.northwestern.edu/collections/dance/index.html>
Elstein's
Performance Studies web site
<http://www.library.northwestern.edu/collections/performancestudies/index.html>
Elstein's
Theatre web site

<http://www.library.northwestern.edu/collections/theatre/index.html>
This session combines text and performance
aspects of drama and theatre. Participants will be introduced to
electronic texts for American, Asian-American, Black, and English
drama, as well as the entire Shakespeare corpus. Archives of important
historical newspapers, websites of electronic databases, and links
to exemplary library collections will be outlined. The Library's
own electronic journals and newspapers, tools for special subjects,
such as medieval English theater, and electronic dictionaries will
complete this presentation. |
Resources
in Comparative Literature and Critical Theory
Presenters: Jeffrey
Garrett, Assistant University Librarian for Collection Management
and Bibliographer for Classics; Helmut
Müller-Sievers, Professor of German and Classics and
Director of the Program in Comparative Literary Studies
Garrett's web site
<http://www.library.northwestern.edu/collections/sept2004/comp_lit_intro.html>
Anglo-American e-resources for the
study of literature are well covered elsewhere in our program--but
what if your world doesn't stop at the English Channel, the Pacific,
or the Gulf of Mexico? This session will introduce you to bibliographic
tools for the study of other literatures, as well as full-text
collections of literature in French, German, and Spanish. We will
also look beyond the disciplinary confines of literature to include
philosophers and critical theorists who shape the study of literature
today, from Lessing and Voltaire to Weber, Benjamin, and Derrida. |
The
Stors: ARTstor and JSTOR
Presenters: Russ
Clement, Art Librarian; Martin
Mueller, Professor of English and Classics
Clement's
handouts:
ARTstor Basic &
ARTstor Advanced Features 
New York Times article "For Art History
Scholars, Illumination Is a Click Away" 
JSTOR and ARTstor are
two initiatives by the Mellon Foundation that are changing the way
scholars do business. The former (and earlier of the two) is a digital
collection of about 400 flagship journals, mostly in the social sciences
and humanities. Scheduled to expand to about 600 journals, it automatically
includes all issues older than five years. For scholars in disciplines
covered by JSTOR, this resource has created many opportunities,
as well as moral hazard (why look elsewhere?).
ARTstor, a vast collection of 300,000 and
growing high-quality and well documented images, has only recently
become available
at
Northwestern and is still under development. For students of art,
as well as for more occasional users of cultural images, this
resource
will dramatically lower the access costs (in time and effort) to
images that are good enough for scholarly purposes. Both JSTOR and ARTstor are "free"
if you are a member of a university and unavailable if you are not.
They are very good and very expensive pieces of the emerging digital
scholarly infrastructure, and they illustrate the maxim that digital
does more and costs more.
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Technology,
Interdisciplinarity and Black Social Movements
Presenters: Kathleen
Bethel, African American Studies Librarian; Michael
Hanchard, Professor of Political Science, and Director, Institute
for Diasporic Studies
Bethel's
handout &
50 Electronic Resources (ER)
Global Mappings:
A Political Atlas of the African Diaspora was a pilot project
funded by the Ford Foundation to develop a map of black social
and political movements of the 20th century in comparative and
global perspective. As a teaching tool the Atlas is designed
to enable students and scholars to situate various phenomena
-- such as strikes, civil rights movements, rebellions-- against
the backdrop of the modern world. Students interested in the
site can have a head start on this presentation by visiting http://www.diaspora.northwestern.edu.
The interdisciplinary nature of Black Studies can be a challenge
to electronic research efforts. Approaches to electronic resources
for the study of the
Black experience will be discussed. A survey of proprietary databases
and freely available web resources will introduce the possibilities and limitations
of electronic resources. An assortment of general resources for exploration
of Diasporic topics will also be presented.
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Technology,
Research and the Social Sciences: Where do I Start?
Presenters: Bruce
Foster, DCE Architect; Juan
Onesimo Sandoval, Assistant Professor of Sociology
Foster's PowerPoint 
Sandoval's
PowerPoint 
The
Social Science computing cluster provides secure, scalable computing
power to more than
750 users. Although Northwestern has had such a resource since
1995, a brand new cluster of 18 linux boxes now provides enhanced
scalability, power, and ease of use. The cluster provides robust,
large-scale distributed file service, specialty software, access
to NU Library's datalib, consulting and education services. In
this session, instructors will introduce participants to these
resources and discuss their role in your doctoral research. |
Urban
EconomyHistorical and Current
Presenters: Tom Mann, Bibliographer
for Anthropology, Sociology, German and Slavic Literatures; Joel
Mokyr, Professor of Economics and History
Web
site
<http://www.library.northwestern.edu/collections/sept2004/urban_economy.html>
Urban studies is an area
which involves many disciplines, so it is a good topic from which to
survey available
resources in the social sciences. Even limited to the economic
aspects of urban studies, the sources of information are varied.
This session will focus on various types of online resources, which
cover the topic over varying time periods. It will explore how
to locate and chose appropriate resources. Special attention will
be given to the use of EconLit, Expanded Academic
ASAP (also referred to as EXAC or Infotrac), Eighteenth
Century Collections Online (ECCO), and Journal Storage (JSTOR).
The instructors are a librarian who will demonstrate the operations
of the databases and a faculty member who will explain the importance
of those resources for teaching and research. |
Where
Disciplines Intersect: The Research Question and Digital Resources
in Psychology, Linguistics, and Related Fields
Presenters: Leslie
Bjorncrantz, Bibliographer for Education, Linguistics, Management,
and Psychology; David
Uttal, Associate Professor of Psychology
Handout 
Web
site
<http://www.library.northwestern.edu/collections//where_disciplines_intersect.html>
Colman's A Dictionary of Psychology
defines meta-analysis as "a set of techniques for combining the
results of a number of research studies and analysing them statistically
as a single data set." The instructors will demonstrate library
research in action using the example of a literature search on the
question "Can spatial skills be trained?" as a first step
in identifying studies for meta-analysis. This example is chosen because
it is interdisciplinary and because it presents challenges that give
us opportunities to show general, useful skills. The faculty member
will highlight several key points to keep in mind when using technology
to support an interdisciplinary literature search project, including
the joys and frustrations of working in an online environment. The
bibliographer will address each point with additional suggestions
for the graduate student researcher. The discussion will include with
a brief overview of databases available at Northwestern for researchers
in psychology, linguistics, and related fields. The session handout
will assist students in locating these databases. |
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