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Archive for the 'Trials' Category

Trial access to ProQuest Black Studies

By Sarah Gilmore, on 4 October 2022

UCL has trial access to ProQuest Black Studies until 3rd November 2022.

ProQuest Black Studies combines multi-format primary and secondary sources, such as historical Black newspapers, archival documents, government materials, videos, scholarly journals and essays.

Content includes:

  • Black Historical Newspapers: Including Atlanta Daily World, Baltimore Afro-American, Chicago Defender, Cleveland Call and Post, Los Angeles Sentinel, Louisville Defender, Michigan Chronicle, New York Amsterdam News, Norfolk Journal and Guide, Philadelphia Tribune, and Pittsburgh Courier
  • NAACP Papers
  • Civil Rights Organizational Papers
  • Black Abolitionist Papers

Please send feedback on this resource to your subject librarian.

Trial access to ESG content in IBISWorld

By Sarah Gilmore, on 22 September 2022

UCL has trial access to the ESG Risk Score Reports within IBISWorld until 22nd October 2022. Please note that this is addition to our existing access.

IBISWorld’s new ESG Risk Score chapter offers risk ratings and analysis on the environmental, social and governance aspects of UK industry operations to help you identify areas of concern in portfolios and inform credit policy.

Access includes:

  • ESG risk scores for over 500 industries
  • Measure an industry’s ESG risk across a set of 15 environmental, social and governance issues
  • Key ESG issues and talking points for each industry

Please send feedback on this resource to your subject librarian.

Trial access to Archive Finder

By Sarah Gilmore, on 20 July 2022

UCL has trial access to Archive Finder including ArchivesUSA and NIDS UK/Ireland until 19th August 2022.

Archive Finder is a current directory which describes over 220,000 collections of primary source material housed in thousands of repositories across the United States, the United Kingdom and Ireland.

Please send feedback on this resource to your subject librarian.

Trial access to Al-Ahram Digital Archive

By Sarah Gilmore, on 16 June 2022

UCL has trial access to Al-Ahram Digital Archive from East View until 10th July 2022.

Al-Ahram Digital Archive contains all obtainable published issues from 1875.

Founded in 1875, Al-Ahram (الأهرام‎, “The Pyramids”) is one of the longest-running newspapers in the Middle East. It has long been regarded as Egypt’s most authoritative and influential newspaper, and one of the most important newspapers in the Arab world, with a circulation of over 1 million. Prior to 1960, the newspaper was an independent publication and was renowned for its objectivity and independence. After being nationalized by President Nasser in 1960, Al-Ahram became the de facto voice of the Egyptian government and today the newspaper is managed by the Supreme Council of Press.

Please send feedback on this resource to your subject librarian.

Trial access to Nineteenth Century Collections Online: Asia and the West: Diplomacy and Cultural Exchange

By Sarah Gilmore, on 24 May 2022

UCL has trial access to Nineteenth Century Collections Online: Asia and the West: Diplomacy and Cultural Exchange from Gale until 22nd June 2022.

Nineteenth Century Collections Online: Asia and the West: Diplomacy and Cultural Exchange features a range of primary source collections related to international relations between Asian countries and the West during the nineteenth century. These documents include government reports, diplomatic correspondence, periodicals, newspapers, treaties, trade agreements, NGO papers, and more, offering a look at the inner workings of international relations.

This resource covers the history of British and US foreign policy and diplomacy; Asian political, economic, and social affairs; the Philippine Insurrection; the Opium Wars; the Boxer Rebellion; missionary activity in Asia; and other topics. Asia and the West also includes personal letters and diaries, offering first-hand accounts and the human side of international politics, as well as nautical charts, maps, ledgers, company records, and expedition and survey reports from 1790 to 1949.

Documents were sourced from the National Archives, Kew; the National Archives, United States; and other international collections and include:

  • British Foreign Office: Japan Correspondence, 1856-1905
  • Dispatches from U.S. Consuls in Osaka and Hiogo (Kobe), Japan, 1868-1906
  • Dispatches from U.S. Consuls in Seoul, Korea, 1886-1906
  • Chinese Missionary Gleaner (1853-1859)
  • History of the Philippine Insurrection Against the United States, 1899-1903, and Documents
  • Relating to the War Department Project for Publishing of History, 1899-1903
  • Missionary Files: Methodist, Episcopal Church Missionary Correspondence, 1846-1912 (China, Japan, Korea)
  • Notes from the Korean Legation in the United States to the Department of State, 1883-1906
  • Philippine Insurgent Records, 1896-1901, with Associated Records of the U.S. War Department, 1900-1906, 1896-1906
  • And much more

Please send feedback on this resource to your subject librarian.

Trial access to Adam Matthew Digital’s Research Methods Primary Sources

By Sarah Gilmore, on 24 May 2022

UCL has trial access to Adam Matthew Digital’s Research Methods Primary Sources until 21st June 2022.

Research Methods Primary Sources enables users to build the skills they need to conduct research and evaluate primary sources with confidence.

Designed as a tool to support students of the humanities and social sciences, Research Methods Primary Sources introduces the key approaches and methodologies of working with source material. The resource provides practical advice and instruction from experts around the world to provide foundational guidance on where students can find historical documents, the questions they might want to pose and how best to conduct their own research and analysis of materials

Comprising of video interviews, how-to guides, and essays from scholars and librarians working across the globe, it features over 100 individual case studies and more than 300 historical items drawn from 50 archives, providing opportunities for students to employ their new skills and knowledge to critically evaluate sources.
Please send feedback on this resource to your subject librarian.

Trial access to Cambridge Archive Editions Online: Minorities in the Middle East: Jewish Communities in Arab Countries, 1841-1974

By Sarah Gilmore, on 18 May 2022

UCL has trial access to Cambridge Archive Editions Online: Minorities in the Middle East: Jewish Communities in Arab Countries, 1841-1974 until 12th June 2022

Minorities in the Middle East: Jewish Communities in Arab Countries, 1841-1974 is the online version of the 6 volume series featuring reports describing the arrangements and conditions for Jewish communities living under Islam, throughout the Arab world, from 1840 to 1974. The situation of Jewish communities has varied according to the country of habitation and the particular time period although it is thought generally to have deteriorated from 1800 with the decline of the Ottoman Empire. Up to 1948 more than a million Jews lived in the Muslim countries of the Middle East. By 1992, excluding the non-Arab states of Turkey and Iran, the number was only c.20,000. The documents provide a series of snapshots of history from which it is possible to ascertain something of the contemporary position of Jewish communities at particular points. Geographically the collection covers the Arab Middle East and the Maghreb countries, but excludes the (non-Arab) states of Turkey and Iran.

Please send feedback on this resource to your subject librarian.

Trial access to FBIS Daily Reports: Asia & Pacific (1974-1987), Joint Publications Research Service (JPRS) Reports (1957-1995) and American Proxy Wars: Korea and Vietnam Global Perspectives (1946-1975)

By Sarah Gilmore, on 5 May 2022

UCL has trial access to FBIS Daily Reports: Asia & Pacific (1974-1987), Joint Publications Research Service (JPRS) Reports (1957-1995) and American Proxy Wars: Korea and Vietnam Global Perspectives (1946-1975) until 10th June 2022.

FBIS Daily Reports: Asia & Pacific (1974-1987) : please note that this trial access has been included with our existing subscribed content. This collection consists of FBIS APA (Asia & Pacific, 1974-1987) and EAS (East Asia, 1987-1996). These reports provide national and occasionally local perspectives through a wealth of original political broadcasts and newspaper coverage.

Joint Publications Research Service (JPRS) Reports (1957-1995) From the height of the Cold War to the dawn of the Internet and the dissolution of the Soviet Union, JPRS reports document the changes on the ground. JPRS—acting as a unit within the Central Intelligence Agency—was established in March 1957 as part of the United States Department of Commerce’s Office of Technical Services.

American Proxy Wars: Korea and Vietnam Global Perspectives (1946-1975) : While the origins of both the Korean and Vietnam wars are rooted in their countries’ respective histories, much of the world regarded the wars as proxies for the larger Cold War between the United States and the Soviet Union. This collection features original sources covering Cold War politics, East-West relations and colonial history.

Please send feedback on this resource to your subject librarian.

 

 

Trial access to Jewish Renaissance Archive

By Sarah Gilmore, on 28 April 2022

UCL has trial access to Jewish Renaissance Archive until 28th May 2022. UCL students and staff can access the archive via the link in the Passwords for electronic journals and databases page.

Since its first publication in 2001, Jewish Renaissance has uncovered Jewish communities, arts and culture across the world. Over 85 back issues of the periodical are available as part of the new, fully searchable, digital archive. Published quarterly, each issue includes insightful features on the worlds of Jewish poetry, art, and theatre, as well as lively debate on current affairs.

Please send feedback on this resource to your subject librarian

Trial access to the World Cinema Collection from film streaming platform Films on Demand

By Sarah Gilmore, on 28 April 2022

UCL has trial access to the World Cinema Collection from film streaming platform Films on Demand until 27th May 2022.

World Cinema Collection includes the best of the silent era, groundbreaking international directors, masterpieces from the mid-20th century, and contemporary films from around the world, including Africa, Asia, Europe, Latin America, the Caribbean, the Middle East, and North America

Highlights include:

  • German film – Fritz Lang’s Metropolis and M, Josef Von Sternberg’s The Blue Angel, Walter Ruttmann’s Berlin: Symphony of a Metropolis, multiple films by F. W. Murnau and G. W. Pabst (including Pandora’s Box and Diary of a Lost Girl), as well as films by Paul Leni, Robert Siodmak, and Robert Wiene.
  • French film – Georges Méliès’s seminal work A Trip to the Moon, as well as films by Jean Renoir (Rules of the Game and Diary of a Chambermaid), Luis Buñuel’s France-based work (including An Andalusian DogTristana, and The Golden Age), and René Clair (The Million).
  • Japanese film – 16 films by Akira Kurosawa (including RashomonDrunken Angel, and Stray Dog), 21 films by Kenji Mizoguchi (including The Story of the Last ChrysanthemumsSansho the Bailiff, and Ugetsu), 16 films by Yasujirō Ozu (including Tokyo Story; I Was BornBut…; and Late Spring), and films by contemporary directors such as Juzo Itami and Kazuyoshi Okuyama.
  • Soviet, Eastern European and Central Asian film – 10 films by Sergei Eisenstein (including Battleship PotemkinOctoberStrike, and Ivan the Terrible), and award-winning contemporary films from Kyrgyzstan, Kazakhstan, Tajikistan, Yugoslavia, Bosnia, Croatia, Albania, Serbia, Macedonia, and Georgia (including When Father Was Away on Business, Fine Dead Girls, and A Wonderful Night in Split).
  • American film – multiple titles from Buster Keaton (including The General and Steamboat Bill Jr.), D.W. Griffith (including The Birth of a Nation and Intolerance), Charlie Chaplin, and others representing the best of early American cinema, plus films by Douglas Sirk, Alfred Hitchcock, Frank Capra, Ida Lupino, Orson Welles, Busby Berkeley, and others covering the golden age of Hollywood.
  • African film – Cairo Station by Youssef Chahine, six films by Ousmane Sembène (including Black Girl aka La Noire de…, and The Curse aka Xala), two films by Flora Gomes (Those Whom Death Refused and Tree of Blood) and acclaimed contemporary films such as The Night of Truth, Daughter of Keltoum, and Max and Mona.
  • Italian film – classics from Vittorio De Sica (including The Bicycle Thief and Two Women), Federico Fellini (including La Dolce Vita and Variety Lights), and Roberto Rossellini (including PaisanRome, Open City; and Journey to Italy), as well as films by Luchino Visconti, Michelangelo Antonioni, and Giuseppe De Santis.
  • Chinese-language film – the 1993 Cannes Palme d’Or winner Farewell My Concubine (Chen Kaige), Spring in a Small Town (Fei Mu), four films by King Hu (Dragon Gate Inn, Touch of Zen, The Fate of Lee Khan, and Raining in the Mountain), four of Zhang Yimou’s most famous films (The Story of Qiu Ju, Red Sorghum, and Ju Dou), as well as two films by Tsai Ming-Liang (The River and Vive L’Amour).
  • Latin American film – classics from Glauber Rocha (including Black God, White Devil; Antonio Das Mortes; and Entranced Earth), 12 of Luis Buñuel’s Mexico-based productions (including Cannes Palme d’Or winner ViridianaThe Exterminating Angel, and Simon of the Desert), and award-winning contemporary films by directors from Mexico, Brazil, Columbia, Argentina, Uruguay, Peru, Cuba, Chile, and Ecuador.
  • Turkish and Middle Eastern film – seven films by Turkish director Yılmaz Güney (including Cannes Palme d’Or winner The Way aka Yol, and Hope aka Umut) as well as award-winning contemporary films from Iran, Iraq, Lebanon, Egypt, Israel, and Palestine (including The Kite, The White Meadows, and Toll Booth).
  • British film – the pre-Hollywood work of major British directors like Alfred Hitchcock (including The 39 Steps, The Lady Vanishes, and The Man Who Knew Too Much) and Michael Anderson (1984 and The Naked Edge).
  • Indian film – 14 films by Satyajit Ray (including Pather Panchali, The World of Apu, Aparajito, and The Big City), as well as films by contemporary directors such as Adoor Gopalakrishnan, Partho Sen-Gupta, and Rajesh Shera.
  • Caribbean film – contemporary films from Curaçao, Cuba, Haiti, and Trinidad and Tobago distributed by ArtMattan Productions, a leading distributor of films from the African diaspora.

All foreign language films are accompanied by English subtitles

Please send feedback on this resource to your subject librarian.