The most frequently-used databases
The following databases are newly acquired or being evaluated for a future subscription.
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.
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.
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.
Reference works that investigate the impact and influence of the Bible in literature.
This database includes full-text journal articles from 1816 to 1911. A great resources for our scholars studying that period of time
This database covers around 10,000,000 pieces of literature in about 20,000 different kinds of periodicals published between 1911 and 1949. As an important part of the historical archive, this database has significant academic and historical values. It not only helps reproduce the unique historical features of the period from 1911 to 1949 and restore the historical memory, but also enriches the digital resources of periodicals so as to facilitate users to conduct academic research on the history of this period.