Pages

Thursday, November 2, 2017



ProQuest Statistical Abstracts of the U.S.   

 

Working on a project that requires statistical data? To help with that and much more Atkins library would like to feature ProQuest Statistical Abstracts of the U.S.
It is 1400+ individually indexed tables (with attached spreadsheets), both searchable and browsable.  Use the Abstract as a convenient volume for statistical reference, and as a guide to sources of more information both in print and on the Web.

It also offers search a guide, tables and the new infographics, which demonstrates ways the data found in ProQuest Statistical Abstract of the U.S. can be used to provide context when developing and supporting a position in research projects.

Monday, October 2, 2017

Check Out The Oxford Encyclopedia of Theatre & Performance For Some Frightful Inspiration


Looking to put a macabre spin on your October research papers or wanting to create your own display of terror for your Halloween entertainment?  Take a peek inside The Oxford Encyclopedia of Theatre and Performance to get some spooktacular ideas on performances in playhouses, dance, opera, radio, film, and television.  Plus, you’ll find award-winning information on popular performances, including carnivals, circus, and public executions (a gruesome performance, incorporating all the elements of staging, costume, text, actors, and audience).
The Oxford Encyclopedia of Theatre and Performance, edited by Dennis Kennedy, was the winner of the 2004 Reference Reviews Top Ten Print Reference Source and the 2004 Choice Outstanding Academic Title.  Where can you find authoritative and up-to-date information about theatre and performance from ancient Greek theatre to the latest developments in London, Paris, New York, and around the globe?  Inside the pages of The Oxford Encyclopedia of Theatre and Performance, of course!
This electronic database offers online, search capabilities with entries ranging from brief, term definitions to in-depth genres and movements descriptions.  Did you know the famous stage illusion, known as Pepper’s Ghost, was invented by Professor John Henry Pepper and first demonstrated in London in 1862?  Interested in learning how French playwrights used special effects to create melodrama back in the late 1700s – early 1800s?  Read this spine-tingling discourse on Pixérécourt, René-Charles Guilbert de (1773-1844).
Search The Oxford Encyclopedia of Theatre and Performance entries by city, regions, and place performances in its social and political context.  It combines an international cast of over 300 specialist contributors.  Needing a fresh idea for that special Halloween costume?  Did you know that the mask occurs in virtually every culture?  Search The Oxford Encyclopedia of Theatre and Performance using the search terms, mask and masking, to learn more about this potent force in theatrical performance.  
Speaking of Halloween, read about the ingenious use of the radio by Orson Welles to broadcast the War of the Worlds as a Hallowe'en programme ( 30 October 1938 ).  Read cautiously or you may find yourself bewitched, like the characters in Peter Barnes’, most notable, 1974 theatrical performance, The Bewitched, featuring Gothic horror, dance, and popular song, performed in RSC, Aldwych Theatre, London.

Friday, September 1, 2017


Honoring Hispanic Heritage Month
To commemorate National Hispanic Heritage Month Atkins library will be featuring three resources. These resources will aid you in examining the significant events that have forged the rich history of Hispanic Heritage and culture.
http://www.readex.com/sites/default/files/styles/page_banner/adaptive-image/public/productbanner-HAN_0.jpg?itok=nT5sfOVy
Hispanic American Newspapers, 1808-1980, represents the single largest compilation of Spanish-language newspapers printed in the U.S. during the 19th and 20th centuries. The distinctive collection features hundreds of Hispanic American newspapers, including many long scattered and forgotten titles published in the 19th century. It is based on the “Recovering the U.S. Hispanic Literary Heritage Project,” a national research effort directed by Nicolás Kanellos, Brown Foundation Professor of  Hispanic Studies at the University of Houston.
  • Features hundreds of fully searchable newspapers published in the United States by Hispanics
  • Based on the "Recovering the U.S. Hispanic Literary Heritage Project,” a national research effort
  • Offers unabridged voices, ranging from intellectuals and literary notables to politicians, union organizers and grassroots figures
[http://www.readex.com/content/hispanic-american-newspapers-1808-1980]

http://www.readex.com/sites/default/files/styles/page_banner/adaptive-image/public/productbanner-LAN.jpg?itok=Fn0wIS20
Latin American Newspapers, Series 1 and 2, 1805-1922, offer unprecedented coverage of the people, issues and events that shaped this vital region during the 19th and early 20th centuries. Featuring titles from Argentina, Brazil, Chile, Cuba, Guatemala, Mexico, Peru, Venezuela and a dozen other countries, these resources provide a wide range of viewpoints from diverse Latin American cultures. Together, both series of Latin American Newspaperschronicles the evolution of Latin America over two centuries through eyewitness reporting, editorials, legislative information, letters, poetry, advertisements, obituaries and other items.
  • Online access to more than 280 newspapers published between 1805 and 1922
  • From Argentina to Venezuela—titles from more than 20 countries in the region
  • Created in partnership with the Center for Research Libraries and its contributing members
[http://www.readex.com/content/latin-american-newspapers-series-1-and-2-1805-1922]

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.   

Wednesday, July 5, 2017

HeritageQuest Online
Image result for heritagequest online
If celebrating our nation's Independence Day prompts interest in your family’s history, UNC Charlotte Atkins library has a great e-resource for you. HeritageQuest Online offers novice and experienced genealogists the opportunity to search census records, military records, cemeteries, immigration records, Freedman’s bank, U.S. Serials Set, and books on local or family histories. It also includes maps, a variety of research aids, and tips of the day.
HeritageQuest® Online is a comprehensive treasury of American genealogical sources—rich in unique primary sources, local and family histories, convenient research guides, interactive census maps, and more. With a robust search interface, thumbnail images, hit highlighting, easy-to-use tools, and convenient in-library or remote access through the library portal, it’s easy to see why HeritageQuest continues to be one of the most recommended resources by family history publications and genealogists.
The clues are out there waiting. Let HeritageQuest Online help you to find them. (http://www.proquest.com/products-services/HeritageQuest-Online.html)

http://librarylink.uncc.edu/login?url=http://www.nclive.org/cgi-bin/nclsm?rsrc=218

Thursday, June 1, 2017

World Cinema Video Collection


What could be better than watching a great movie during those lazy days of summer?  Having access to over 485 feature films from the best directors in the world!  The World Cinema Video Collection gives you access to a unique video collection.  Films on Demand, an Infobase Learning Company affiliate, provides the streaming video subscription.
This database includes films from the silent era, American and European masterpieces from the mid-20th century, and contemporary films featured by Global Lens.  If you are interested in broadening your cultural horizons or interested in learning about the history of cinema, check out the World Cinema Video Collection.  
Featuring films from every nationality, the World Cinema Video Collection includes German; French, Japanese, Soviet, Eastern European and Central Asia; American; African; Italian; Chinese-language; Latin American; Turkish and Middle Eastern; British; Indian; and Caribbean films.  Here are a few of the collection highlights:
German Films: G.W. Pabst’s Pandora’s Box and Diary of a Lost Girl
French Films: Jean Renoir’s Rules of the Game and Diary of a Chambermaid
American Films: Films from Hollywood’s Golden Age including Buster Keaton’s The General
British Films: Alfred Hitchcock’s The Man Who Knew Too Much and The 39 Steps
Click here to download the free fact sheet with more information about the World Cinema Video Collection.  You can search the collection in the UNC Charlotte streaming video database.