The most frequently-used databases
The following databases are newly acquired or being evaluated for a future subscription.
From zines, newspapers and ephemera, to oral histories, films and photographs, 1980s Culture and Society is an eclectic and multi-faceted resource compiled from archival collections housed across the United States, United Kingdom, Australia, and Canada. Capturing diverse perspectives, materials produced by grassroots organizations and under-represented groups are presented alongside government records and mainstream media to showcase the key social, cultural, and political concerns of the decade.
Direct access to current Atlanta Journal-Constitution and app brought to you by Emory Libraries. Please use this link to register for access: https://guides.libraries.emory.edu/ajc_digital_emory/instructions
Data sets in the areas of finance, marketing, consumer demographics, behavioral economics, urban planning and real estate. Access: Register for an account with your Emory email and you should be verified. Dewey Data has terms and conditions that differ from most Emory Libraries databases. please see the Dewey Data Guide: https://guides.libraries.emory.edu/dewey_data
Includes 370+ original-language films from some of the most important producers and independent filmmakers in Latin America. Abstracts and indexing available in Spanish, Portuguese, and English.
French version of Le Monde, one of the leading newspapers of France. Access to archive back to 2001.
A historic database of foods, drugs, dyes and fibers derived from plants used by Native American peoples. Includes references to texts organized by tribes, plant, and use.
Contains bibliographic information and abstracts of health-related articles, reports, surveys, and other resource documents pertaining to the health and health care of American Indians, Alaska Natives, and Canadian First Nations. Includes health-related issues, programs, and initiatives regarding North American Indigenous peoples.
Bringing together unique primary sources drawn from key archival collections, The Olympic Movement presents a documentary record of the origins, expansion and growth of the Olympic Games, and the global history of sport. Through a broad range of sources including correspondence, official reports, newsletters and film footage, researchers can chart the history of sport and its relationships with culture, society, business, media and politics between the 1890s and 1990s.
PressReader is a digital library of newspapers and magazines from 157 countries in sixty-four languages. Their subject range spans from current news and their expert analysis, through fashion, cooking, and pets, to tips on sailing. PressReader enables users to create their own libraries, download articles for later reading, and use built-in translation capacity to access news written in a language the reader is unfamiliar with.
Royal Shakespeare Company Archives provides a comprehensive record of the performance history of the Royal Shakespeare Company and its predecessor, the Shakespeare Memorial Theatre. Browse and compare almost 1,400 prompt books to uncover how productions took shape, and explore the creative process behind the company's most important presentations in extensive additional documentation including production records, costume designs, music files and photographs.
Full access to the current Atlantic and its archive, both online and via the app. To access the Emory subscription, please click on "You will need to click on “sign in” in the right hand corner, and select “Accessing a group subscription? Sign in through your institution.”
Reference works that investigate the impact and influence of the Bible in literature.