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Occupiers and Occupied in Post-World War II East Asia
History 286 Spring 2007
Course Syllabus PDF

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Articles |
Newspapers |
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Citing Sources and Plagiarism
FINDING BOOKS
Using Subject Headings
Search by Keyword and look for Subject Headings in individual
records.
To modify a search:
- Use words from the Subject Heading in a Keyword search
- Click on the Subject Heading itself
Examples of Subject Headings:
FINDING JOURNAL ARTICLES
| Articles:
A Step-by-Step Guide
1.) Look for citations and articles
- Gather citations
with Indexes and Databases
- Find citations
in books and articles with Bibliographies
2.) Locate the journal when you have
a citation
1.) Ariadne
(print)
- Title search on Title
of the Journal to locate print journal
2.) Online Journals at K
- Title search on Title
of the Journal to locate article in
a Full Text Database
3.)
WestCat - Western Michigan's catalog
(finds
the journal at WMU -- you must go there to retrieve
it, whether it's print or online)
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Indexes
Indexes will lead you to article citations that include
author, article title, journal title, volume number, publication
date, and page number. Citations do not include the entire
article. You must locate the journal once you have a
citation.
Historical
Abstracts <
about
>
Social
Sciences Abstracts <
about
>
Readers'
Guide Retrospective (1890-1982) <
about
> (you must enable
popup windows)
Readers' Guide Abstracts indexes and abstracts general interest
and popular periodicals published in the U.S. and Canada.
Readers'
Guide Abstracts (1983-present) <
about
>
Readers' Guide Abstracts indexes and abstracts general interest
and popular periodicals published in the U.S. and Canada.
Academic
OneFile <
about
>
Full-Text Resources
Full text databases include citation information as
well as the text of the article itself.
JSTOR
< about
>
Scholarly academic journals
Project
MUSE < about
>
Scholarly academic journals
Proquest
Research Library <
about
>
Includes scholarly and non-scholarly sources;
can limit to scholarly journals
New
York Times (1851 to 3 years ago) <
about
>
PDF version of the historical New York Times. Looks exactly
like a copy of the paper.
New
York Times (1995 to present) <
about
>
Text version of the New York Times. Does not include
sidebars or graphics.
Harper's
Weekly (1857-1889) <
about
>
Infotrac
General Reference Center Gold <
about
>
Infotrac
Health Reference Center - Academic <
about
>
OmniFile <
about
>
Book Reviews
Historical
Abstracts < about > (Book
Reviews included, but cannot limit to them)
America:
History and Life < about > (can
limit to Book Reviews)
Book
Review Digest <
about
>
Project
MUSE < about
>
(In Advanced Search, limit to "reviews." Good
for relatively recent materials.)
Proquest
Research Library <
about
>
(In Advanced Search, click "More Search Options"
and limit Document type to "Book Review." Can
limit to peer-reviewed journals.)
JSTOR
< about
>
(In Advanced Search, limit to "reviews." Good
for older materials.)
Types of Periodicals
Scholarly Journals (Japan Quarterly)
- Authors are scholars or researchers in their fields.
- Authors cite their sources in footnotes, endnotes, and
bibliographies.
- Individual issues have little or no advertising.
- Articles must go through a peer-review process.
- Articles usually report original scholarly research.
- Most illustrations are charts, figures, or graphs.
- Authors use the specialized language or jargon of the
discipline.
Popular Magazines (Newsweek or Time)
Don't forget to use bibliographies
contained in reference books, annotated bibliographies, circulating books, and journal articles!
NEWSPAPERS
New
York Times (1851 to 3 years ago) <
about
>
PDF version of the historical New York Times. Looks exactly
like a copy of the paper.
New
York Times (1995 to present) <
about
>
Text version of the New York Times. Does not include
sidebars or graphics.
Infotrac Newsstand <
about
>
Some free websites with good news coverage:
World
Newspapers - Asia
http://www.world-newspapers.com/asia.html
This site links to world newspapers, magazines, and news
sites in English, sorted by country and region.
Asian Newspapers
http://www.newslink.org/nonusa.html
IMAGES
Google Image Search
http://images.google.com/
New
York Public Library Digital Gallery
http://digitalgallery.nypl.org/nypldigital/dgadvsearch.cfm
Library
of Congress Prints and Photographs Online Catalog
http://www.loc.gov/rr/print/catalog.html
Many photos are digitized -- some are not. Also, be aware
of copyright restrictions when using these photos!
Smithsonian History and Culture
http://www.si.edu/history_and_culture/
Art and Culture of Japan During the Allied Occupation,
1945-1952
http://www.smithsonianeducation.org/migrations/sackler/salthome.html
Okinawa Prefectural Archives
http://www.archives.pref.okinawa.jp/ (site
in Japanese)
CITING YOUR SOURCES in the MLA style
See also: How
to Cite Sources
For help with citing online sources, see
the MLA
Style FAQ.
MLA Handbook for Writers of Research Papers
6th ed. New York : Modern Language Association of America,
2003.
(Ref. LB2369 .G53)
Hornet, Kay. "Kalamazoo's Inspirational
College Mascots." Jivin' in the Hive 26.3 (1999)
: 21-35.
Reader, Avid, and Perma Bound. A Comprehensve
History of Books and Bookmaking in Kalamazoo. Kalamazoo:
City Press, 1933.
Seashore, Shelly. "Bathing Cap Use in Kalamazoo,
Michigan." Sand, Soil, and Toil: Beaches in
the American Midwest. Ed. Ivana Suntann and Misty
C. Weed. Chicago: Flaming Dune Publications, 1998. 234-267.
ALWAYS check the style manual!! DO NOT rely on other
guides!
PLAGIARISM
Plagiarism: copying or stealing anothers work or
ideas.
To avoid plagiarism, you must cite:
- spoken and written quotations
- ideas and opinions
- facts that are not general knowledge
- paraphrases of all of the above
See Plagiarism:
What it Is and How to Recognize and Avoid It
(Produced by Writing Tutorial Services, Indiana University)
When in doubt, ask your instructor!
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