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HIST 341: The History of the Early Republic (HC): Finding Articles

History 341: The History of the Early Republic (Saler) Spring 2020

Indexes for History

Journal articles and other periodical publications provide scholarly information on specific aspects of history and the history of science. 1) Because scholarly articles are peer reviewed, they are more authoritative than magazine articles.

2) Since articles are published on a shorter schedule than books, they can be more-up-to-date. 

The indexes below are the best ways for you to identify journal articles.  Use the FindIt link in individual article records to access the full text if a link is not already provided.

Also check out recent issues of this journal for in-depth research on your time period:

Journal of the Early Republic 

Indexes for Related Subject Areas

Tracking Citations Forward in Time

Usually researchers find more sources by looking at the footnotes in an article or book, but these will always be older than the publication you have in hand.  
Citation indexes like the Web of Science (which includes sections for the Social Sciences, Arts and Humanities, and Science) are set up to search for sources cited in the footnotes of journal articles as soon as they become available. 

This allows you to find newer articles which cite the books and articles you already know are key for your topic.  By relying on connections between authors rather than subject words and by moving forward in time, citation searching can open up new avenues of research.

See this tutorial for more information on cited reference searching.