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Bibliographies
We mentioned bibliographies in the lesson on encyclopedias and in the lesson on the library catalog. In both places we explained that bibliographies are a great resource for locating further information on a topic. In addition to bibliographies found in the back of books and encyclopedia articles, there are individual books that are nothing but bibliographies. These bibliographies can be found in the Williams Library reference area or in the subject area to which they belong. Book-length bibliographies usually provide in-depth coverage of a specific field of study. They list books, periodical articles, reference resources, and even online resources in a field of study. When you locate an entry that you think might be helpful to your research you look to see if your library owns the item. For instance, if the item in the bibliography is a book, you search the library catalog by author or title to see if the library owns the book. If you are using the library catalog and the NSU library does not own the book, you can search all the SDLN libraries and request the book through interlibrary loan. If the item in the bibliography is a journal article you look to see if the library subscribes to the journal. If not, you either search a full-text periodical database to see if it has the article or you request the article through interlibrary loan. Here are a couple of examples of
bibliographies:
Another example of a book-length
bibliography is entitled A Bibliographical Guide to African-American
Women Writers.
Primary sources:
Secondary sources:
Most book-length bibliographies are
compiled by scholars in a field of study or by librarians. These bibliographies
take a long time to research and produce and they provide the researcher
with links to a wealth of material.
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