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HST 201 Rethinking Indian Encounter with Europeans Spring 2012 Michael Unsworth History Librarian

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Presentation on theme: "HST 201 Rethinking Indian Encounter with Europeans Spring 2012 Michael Unsworth History Librarian"— Presentation transcript:

1 HST 201 Rethinking Indian Encounter with Europeans Spring 2012 Michael Unsworth History Librarian unsworth@msu.edu

2 WHY YOU ARE HERE Your Hypothesis & Bibliogrpahy And Research Paper = 80%

3 OUTLINE Finding a Captivity Narrative Project (Active Learning Time!) Researching Native American Peoples o Handbook of the North American Indians o Online Reference Tools o Locating Bibliographies o Locating Primary Sources o Other Indexes Questions

4 FINDING CAPTIVITY NARRATIVES ONLINE

5 BIBLIOGRAPHIES OF CAPTIVITY NARRATIVES

6 INTRODUCTION

7 CONTENTS

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11 IT’S ACTIVE LEARNING TIME!

12 FIND CAPTIVITY NARRATIVES Group 1: Seminoles Group 2: Apaches Group 3: Comanches Group 4: Delawares 1.Can be online or print 2.Find as many as possible 3.How many different tools did your group use?

13 Researching Native American Peoples

14 FINDING ARTICLES

15 Handbook of North American Indians Washington D.C. : Smithsonian Institution, 1978- “…a 20-volume encyclopedia summarizing knowledge about all Native peoples north of Mesoamerica, including cultures, languages, history, prehistory, and human biology, intended to serve as a standard reference work for anthropologists, historians, students, and the general reader. Each volume contains heavily illustrated chapters by the main authorities on each topic and concludes with an extensive bibliography and index.”

16 CONTENTS

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18 Bibliography

19 INDEX

20 END

21 “But Indians have been cursed above all other people in history. Indians have anthropologists.” SOURCE: Vine Deloria, Custer Died for Your Sins : ; an Indian manifesto ([New York] Avon [1970]), p. 78

22 Citation Styles: Humanities Footnotes or Endnotes Text: “… and cursed him royally 1.” Notes: 1 John Coffey, Extreme Toxicity (East Lansing: MSU Press, 1976), 3; Celeste Pilkingon, “Nothing Accomplished,” Continuity Review 23 (Mar. 1983): 17-45.

23 Citation Styles: Social Science Bibliography Text: “… and cursed him royally.” (Coffey, 1976:3 & Pilkingon, 1983) Bibliography: Coffey, John. 1976. Totally Toxic. East Lansing: MSU Press. Pilkingon, Celeste. 1983. “Nothing Accomplished,” Continuity Review 23: 17-45.

24 RETRIEVING MATERIAL

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26 MELCAT

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30 14 Digit ID Number

31 MELCAT

32 U-borrow

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34 ILLIAD

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36 WORLDCAT

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38 ILLIAD

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40 BIBLIOGRAPHY

41 FINDING BIBLIOGRAPHIES IN THE ONLINE CATALOG

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47 CONTENTS

48 NOTE ABOUT SOURCES

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51 SELECTED WRITINGS

52 PRIMARY SOURCES: Definition “…items that are directly associated with their producer or user and the time period in which they were created. Examples, include diaries, newspapers articles, government documents, photographs, oral interviews, and news broadcasts.” SOURCE: Presnell, Jenny L. The information-literate historian : a guide to research for history students (New York : Oxford University Press, 2007): 93.

53 CAUTION: MEMOIRS

54 SOURCES USED IN A WORK

55 sourcesmanuscripts archivesnotebooks, sketchbooks, etc. archival resourcespersonal narratives, American [Chinese, Finnish] correspondencepersonnel records diariesrecords and correspondence

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58 FOREWORD PREFACE

59 INTRODUCTION

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62 CHAPTER 1 NOTES

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66 Getting Articles From Other Libraries

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68 QUESTIONS

69 What was/were the most valuable thing(s) you learned today?

70 What are you not quite clear about from today’s session; what is muddy in your head?

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72 CONTENTS

73 INDEX

74 PAGE 535 BIBLIOGRAPHY


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