Feb 20, 2018 Discovering Diversity in Databases
This April, we’ll be discovering the diversity found in the various databases that you have access to as a student! From April 2nd to the 5th, we’ll be on Level 2 highlighting a different database along with some treats and crafts. It will be a great opportunity to learn about the diverse resources that are available for use.
Monday April 2nd, American Indian Histories and Cultures
American Indian Histories and Cultures is a wide-ranging digital resource presenting a unique insight into interactions between American Indians and Europeans from their earliest contact, continuing through the turbulence of the American Civil War, the on-going repercussions of government legislation, right up to the civil rights movement of the mid-twentieth century.
See all related databases:
- Meriam Report On Indian Administration And The Survey Of Conditions Of The Indians In The US
- Diversity Studies Collection
- American Indian Movement and Native American Radicalism
- American West
- American Indian Histories and Cultures
- American History in Video
- American Fur Company: America’s First Business Monopoly
- Ethnic NewsWatch
Tuesday April 3rd, Gender Studies (LGBTQ + Women Issues)
With material drawn from hundreds of institutions and organizations, including both major international activist organizations and local, grassroots groups, the documents in the Archives of Sexuality & Gender: LGBTQ History and Culture since 1940 present important aspects of LGBTQ life in the second half of the twentieth century and beyond. The archive illuminates the experiences not just of the LGBTQ community as a whole, but of individuals of different races, ethnicities, ages, religions, political orientations, and geographical locations that constitute this community.
See all related databases:
- Archives of Human Sexuality and Identity: LGBTQ History and Culture since 1940 (Part 1 & 2)
- Diversity Studies Collection
- Gender Studies Collection
- GenderWatch
- Gerritsen Collection of Aletta H Jacobs
- North American Women’s Letters and Diaries
- San Francisco Chronicle Archive includes current content
- Times Digital Archive (London Times) 1785-2012
- Vogue Archive
- Women Writers Online
- Women’s Studies Encyclopedia Online
- Women’s Studies International
- Contemporary Women’s Issues
- Accessible Archives
Wednesday, April 4th: Civil Rights and the Black Freedom Struggle
ProQuest History Vault’s coverage of the Black Freedom Struggle offers the opportunity to study the most well-known and also unheralded events of the Black Freedom Struggle in the 20th Century from the perspective of the men, women, and sometimes even children who waged one of the most inspiring social movements in American history. This category consists of the NAACP Papers and federal government records, organizational records, and personal papers regarding the Black Freedom Struggle in the 20th Century.
See all related databases:
- Ethnic NewsWatch
- African America, Communists, and the National Negro Congress
- African American Newspapers
- Black Economic Empowerment: The National Negro Business League
- Integration of Alabama Schools and the U.S. Military, 1963
- Fight for Racial Justice and the Civil Rights Congress
- Black Freedom Struggle in the 20th Century: Organizational Records and Personal Papers, Part 2
- African America, Communists, and the National Negro Congress
- Black Drama
- Diversity Studies Collection
- NAACP Papers: Branch Department, Branch Files, and Youth Department Files
- NAACP Papers: The NAACP’s Major Campaigns–Education, Voting, Housing, Employment, Armed Forces
- We Were Prepared for the Possibility of Death, Freedom Riders in the South, 1961
- American History in Video
Thursday, April 5th, Japanese-American Relocation Camp Newspapers: Perspectives on Day-to-Day Life
The bombing of Pearl Harbor and the war that followed were well covered by the national press; however, little was known of the actions this nation took in regard to the Japanese-American minority population living on the West Coast. In the months following the attack on Pearl Harbor, the U.S. government was besieged with demands that action be taken against the Japanese in the form of removal from “sensitive areas” and incarceration in camps, preferably located in the interior of the U.S. These demands and subsequent actions were motivated by the fear that Japanese-Americans would become a fifth column for the Japanese military command and spy against the U.S. By April 1942, more than 100,000 Japanese persons – aliens and American citizens – were housed in what came to be known as relocation centers run by the War Relocation Authority.
See all related databases:
- Japanese American Internment: Records of the Franklin D. Roosevelt Library
- Final Accountability Rosters of Evacueess: Japanese-American Relocation Centers
- Japanese-American Relocation Camp Newspapers: Perspectives on Day-to-Day Life
- Personal Justice Denied: Public Hearings of the Commission on Wartime Relocation & Internment
- America: History and Life
- American History in Video
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