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Showing posts with label J. Murrey Atkins Library. Show all posts
Showing posts with label J. Murrey Atkins Library. Show all posts

Friday, December 1, 2017

Alexander Street Videos


Needing a mental break from all those end of the semester projects and finals?  Check out Alexander Street Videos from the list of databases on the J. Murrey Atkins Library search portal.  Did you know The Nutcracker is widely acknowledged as the perfect holiday ballet?  Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky composed the score in 1892, and it premiered in Saint Petersburg on December 18th, at the Mariinsky Theatre.  The Nutcracker has a history of being a holiday classic, performed throughout the world during the Christmas season, primarily in North America.  You can view two versions of this iconic ballet from your laptop, smart phone, or tablet by logging into your Atkins Library account, searching for The Nutcracker using the Alexander Street Videos database and selecting which version you care to watch.

If ballet isn’t your jam, check out the other cool features on the Alexander Street Video’s homepage.  Alexander Street Videos offer easy to follow instructions on making clips to highlight an important piece of content using audio and video players for your personal or scholastic projects.  Needing instructions on creating a playlist, using the Alexander Street video and audio players, and tips for searching the Alexander Street Database?  You’ll find all that and more on the Alexander Street Videos homepage, hosted by ProQuest.

The Alexander Street Video database allows you to search three collections from one search portal, the Dance Online: Dance in Video collection, the Ethnographic Video Online collection, and the LGBT Studies in Video collection.  Where can you find a comprehensive online resource for the study of human culture and society from a global perspective?  Take a peek at the Ethnographic Video Online collection, containing over 1,300 hours of streaming video, including ethnographic films, documentaries, select feature films, and previously unpublished fieldwork.  You’ll find a fascinating, true story about The Reindeer Queen: The True Story of Sinrock Mary, written by Maria Brooks in 2000.  Sinrock Mary was an Eskimo woman living in the Arctic before the turn of the century during the Alaska Gold Rush.

Looking for a cinematic survey of the LGBT community including the LGBT cultural and political evolution?  Spend some time reviewing the award-winning documentaries, interviews, and feature films in the LGBT Studies in Video collection.  Home for Christmas was directed by Frank Mosvold in 2000, and it tells Annie’s story of coming out to her family at the family’s Christmas celebration.  It won Honorable Mention & Audience Choice Prize in the University of Oregon Queer Film Festival.  You’ll find it in the LGBT Studies in Video collection.  From Art & Design to Social Sciences, you’re sure to find something of interest by searching through the Disciplines tab on the Alexander Street Videos database.  Happy Holidays from the J. Murrey Atkins Library!





Tuesday, August 1, 2017

SPIE.Digital Library


Looking for extensive resources on optics and photonics?  Check out the SPIE. Digital Library.  It’s your one-stop shop for getting the latest news and research updates on optics and photonics.  What makes SPIE Digital Library so great?  It gives you access to more than 230,000 technical papers from SPIE journals and conference proceedings from 1990 to the present.  The SPIE Digital Library has over 17,000 new research papers added annually.
You can find the SPIE Digital Library on the J. Murrey Atkins Library webpage by searching the A-Z databases: S directory, using the library search engine portal on the Atkins Library homepage.  Take some time to explore the great features on the SPIE.Digital Library dashboard, which provides quick links to proceedings, journals, eBooks, and topic collections.  On the left side of the homepage, you’ll discover more quick links under the heading, Top Downloads from SPIE Journals and Proceedings.  Some of the topic headings include quick links to resources on Astronomy, Biomedical Optics; Medical Imaging, Communications; Information Technology, Defense and Security, Energy, Lasers, Lithography and Microelectronics, and more.
Look to the right of the SPIE Digital Library webpage to find links to the featured video, conference presentations, SPIE Spotlights on new eBooks, the most cited proceedings articles, and author profiles.  You can create a personal account to receive email alerts on new journal articles and new papers by Topic Collection.   If you need good ideas for a research topic for your next class assignment, browse some of the newsworthy science and technology articles from the SPIE Digital Library.