Latin American Culture and Civilization

Prof. C. Carreras
Guide for finding sources at the George T. Potter Library

 

September 14, 2007

Leigh Keller

lkeller1@ramapo.edu



 I. Library Homepage: http://library.ramapo.edu

  • Provides access to the catalog (OPAC), databases, interlibrary loan forms, etc.
     

II. Finding Books at the George T. Potter Library

  • Catalog: use this to find books, periodical titles (NOT articles ), reserve items, music,and movies owned by the Library. You may limit a search by language, year(s) of publication, type of material, etc. This may take a few seconds to load.
  • Use the Basic Search to find material using Keywords
    • For example: search for maquila or colonial and mexico to locate a broad range of materials the library has on these keywords
    • Use quotation marks around a multi-word phrase so that the system will treat it as a single term, i.e., "colonial mexico"
    • When you find an appropriate title, click on the Related Records tab located at the top of a catalog record to see which Library of Congress subject headings are discussed in that particular book/DVD/periodical
  • Limit search to Online Material (one of the Quick limits) or to Documents Without Shelves
  •  

OR

  • Search the catalog using Subject Browse feature if you know the relevant Library of Congress subject heading
  • For example:
    • Mexico--Civilization
      • Or see breakdown by time period
    • Monroe Doctrine

OR

  • Go to Advanced Search
    • The Boolean search terms are built in for your use:
      • AND: you are commanding the system to search for material on both terms you've entered
      • OR: you are commanding the system to search for meaterial on either of the search terms you have entered
      • NOT: you are commanding the system to search for material on the first term you have entered and to exclude any material on the second term you have entered
    • The catalog system will provide morre focused results

   Tips

  1. Start with broad searches. It is much easier to discard too much rather than start with too little.
  2. If you don't know the Subject Heading, use the Related Records tab located on the top of a catalog record to get to the headings. This will help you focus in on more relevant material.
  3. Can "virtually" browse the shelves by clicking on the call number in a record.

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IV. Reference Material

  • The reference stacks are located on the 3rd floor (this is also the library's entrance).
  • Some useful materials for your projects:
     
Encyclopedia of Latin American History and         Culture Ref F1406 .E53 1996
Cambridge History of Latin America Ref F1410 .C1834 1984
Encyclopedia of Mexico Ref F1210.E63 1997

The Latin American Historical Dictionaries         series: Historical Dictionary of…(Brazil;             Mexico; etc.)

Various call numbers
Latin American History: A Teaching Atlas Ref (Atlas) G1541.S1L6 1983
The Oxford Encyclopedia of Mesoamerican Cultures Ref F1218.6.O95 2001
Bibliograpies  
G. K. Hall Bibliographic Guide to Latin American Studies Ref F1408.Z99 B494 2002
Handbook of Latin American Studies

Print copy:                Ref Z1605.H23

Latin America and the Caribbean: A Critical Guide to Research Sources Ref 1408.Z99 L35
Reference Materials on Latin America in English Ref F1408.Z99 W89
Individual Countries, i.e., Milenios de Mexico Ref F1208.M95 1999
 

   Tips

  1. Use reference books to browse for project ideas and to get started on your research
  2. Use the bibliographies at the end of articles, books, encyclopedias, and dictionaries to locate more material on your topic

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V. Finding Articles (Databases)

Some useful Databases for your projects:

JSTOR

Comprised of the full-text of more than 500 academic journals

Historical Abstracts

Includes abstracts of articles and reviews in scholarly publications.

NOTE: If a citation is not linked to the full-text article in JSTOR, click on the Primary Catalog link to see if the full text of the article is available in our collection in print or through another database.

Academic Search Premier

Multidisciplinary database that contains many full-text articles and citations.

NOTE: When only a citation is indexed, click on the Check availability at Ramapo link to see if the full text of the article is available in our collection in print or through another database.

See also:  
Humanities Index

A bibliographic database that cites articles from English-language periodicals.

NOTE: Click on WilsonLink to see if the full text of the article is available in our collection in print or through another database.

Social Sciences Abstracts

A bibliographic database that indexes and abstracts articles of at least one column in length from English-language periodicals published in the United States and elsewhere from 1994 until the present.

NOTE: Click on WilsonLink to see if the full text of the article is available in our collection in print or through another database.

Scholarly/Peer Reviewed/Refereed articles have been reviewed by a selected panel of experts in the discipline covered by that journal. Many of the databases allow you to limit your search to these articles.

    Tips

  1. Switch to the Advanced Search page in a database. This will give you more control over your results.
  2. Use Boolean Operators (AND, OR, NOT) and Quotation Marks when running a search. For Example: democracy and (realist or realism) nd critique OR (democracy or "political science") and "human rights"
  3. Always check your Spelling if the database results are zero.
  4. Use the Subject Terms or Thesaurus link, if available, to find the best terms to use in a database.

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VI.  Interlibrary Loan and Journal Finder

  • Interlibrary Loan: allows you to borrow a book or article that the George T. Potter library does not own. There is also a link from the Journal Finder page.
    • Find this link under Quick Links on the library's homepage
 
  • Journal Finder: locate the full text of articles in specific periodicalss (journals, newspapers, magazines)to which we have access either in our print or microform collection or through a full-text database.
    • Find this link under Quick Links on the library's homepage
    • Useful journals for your reserach to which we provide access in print and/or via a database:
      • NACLA (North American Congress on Latin America) Report on the Americas)
      • Latin American Research Review
      • Latin American Perspectives
      • Journal of Latin American Cultural Studies (TraveSia)
    • If you search for a journal to which we do not provide access, you will find a link to an Interlibrary Loan Request form for an article.
 

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VII. Preparing Bibliographies

  • Citing Sources (Duke University) for examples of APA, ASA, Chicago, MLA, and Turabian citation styles
  • Diana Hacker Online
  • The Open Handbook Online ( by Ann Raimes with Maria Jerskey)
  • Style handbooks are also kept on reserve at the Circulation Desk
  • Always be consistent and follow the examples for the required style format

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VIII. Web Sources


Need more help? Visit or call the Reference Desk: 201.684.7574

 
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