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HIST 49 : Race and Foreign Affairs (SC)
background information:
Encyclopedia of U.S. foreign relations
Publisher: New York : Oxford University Press, 1997.
Guide to American foreign relations since 1700
Publisher: Santa Barbara, Calif. : ABC-Clio, c1983.
Chronological history of United States foreign relations
Publisher: New York : Garland, 1985-1991.
Documents of American diplomacy
Publisher: Westport, Conn. : Greenwood Press, 2002.
Minority rights in America
Publisher: Washington, DC : CQ Press, c2002.
Encyclopedia of the United States in the nineteenth century
primary sources:
Primary sources are first-hand accounts of events or conditions during a particular time period, often recorded contemporaneously by participants or observers.
Some types of primary sources include:
- Diaries, journals, letters, speeches, manuscripts, notes and other written material describing experienced or observed events.
- Autobiographies and memoirs describing experienced or observed events in hindsight. Although such hindsight can bias the record of events, at times such reminiscences may provide the only available data on certain occurrences. Alternatively, autobiographies and memoirs can provide clues as to how the author and his contemporaries viewed a past event.
- Published items, such as articles in magazines, journals or newspapers, or books, which report on contemporary events.
- Photographs, films, videos, news broadcasts and transcripts, audio recordings, etc. documenting contemporary events.
- Any physical artifact, such as art objects, costumes, buildings, maps, monuments, etc.
- Governmental and organizational information, such as statistics, reports, press releases, propaganda, records, surveys, correspondence, publications, etc.
- Materials which provide a sociological or psychological snapshot of a certain time period, such as public opinion polls or other expressions of popular culture such as television shows, movies, music, best-sellers, advertisements, etc.
Tips on finding primary sources in library catalogs
The keyword searching option can turn up additional published primary sources. Try entering terms like "correspondence," "diary" or "diaries," "records" and "documents." Some other promising terms ("sources," "papers" and "letters") occur in too many records to be of much practical value.
These subject headings, issued by the Library of Congress, describe materials listed in most library catalogs. You should know that Subject Headings assigned to books are not necessarily intuitive or logical. For instance, the Subject Heading for Native Americans is NOT Native Americans but Indians of North America.
Standard cataloging procedures attach a few formulaic subheadings to many records that qualify as primary sources. Watch for these words or phrases when you scan retrieved sets of titles, or enter them under the SUBJECT HEADING search option:
- "--Sources"
- "--Personal Narratives"
- "--Description and Travel"
- "--Facsimiles"
- "--Charters, Grants, Privileges"
- "--early works to 1800"
- "--periodicals"
- "--Interviews"
- "--Correspondence"
- "--Pamphlets"
Some primary sources that you may want to consider for your term paper include government publications and newspapers. In addition, both the Friends Historical Library and the Peace Collection include materials related to race, inequality, social justice, civil rights, and foreign affairs. Keyword searches in Tripod can help you identify government publications, as well as items in special collections (FHL and Peace). The library has a variety of other tools that may also help you track down primary sources, such as the following:
Guide to Primary Sources
U.S. Congressional serial set
Provider: Readex
LexisNexis Congressional
Foreign Relations of the United States
According to the State Department, which compiles these volumes, "The Foreign Relations of the United States series presents the official documentary historical record of major U.S. foreign policy decisions and significant diplomatic activity [...] Foreign Relations volumes contain documents from Presidential libraries, Departments of State and Defense, National Security Council, Central Intelligence Agency, Agency for International Development, and other foreign affairs agencies as well as the private papers of individuals involved in formulating U.S. foreign policy."
The series begins with Lincoln's presidency, and is arranged chronologically by presidential administration. Volumes since 1952 are further subdivided by geographical region and topic.
The link above will take you to earlier volumes of the set. For the FRUS since the Kennedy administration, check out the State Department's archive.
finding books:
Sample LC subject headings include:
- Pequot War, 1636-1638
- Japanese Americans--Evacuation And Relocation--1942 1945
- West (U.S.)--Race Relations
WorldCat
Provider: OCLC
finding articles:
America, history and life
Provider: EBSCO
JSTOR
ProQuest Research Library
Provider: ProQuest
Worldwide political science abstracts
Provider: CSA
requesting from other libraries:
Request items from Bryn Mawr and Haverford by clicking on the "request" button in Tripod. Use your name and the barcode from the back of your student ID. Your requested materials will generally arrive at Swarthmore in 1-2 days.
EZ-Borrow
You can also request items from our regional partner libraries using EZ-Borrow. Again, you'll need your 14-digit barcode number to make a request. These items usually arrive on campus in 3-5 days.
Interlibrary Loan (ILL)
If you can't get what you need from the Trico or EZ-Borrow libraries, our interlibrary loan specialists can help you--fill out an ILL request form, but keep in mind that these materials could take several weeks to arrive on campus.
If you're unsure of which service to use, check out this guide to Tri-College Borrowing and Interlibrary Loan.
research help:
If you need research assistance, I'm at the reference desk on Tuesdays, 12:30-3 p.m., and on Wednesdays, 7-10 p.m. You can also make an appointment or stop by to meet with me in my office, which is on Level 1 of McCabe.
Looking for more ways to ask a librarian? Call, email, IM, or come to the McCabe reference desk!




