History Resource Center
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History Resource Center:
World
History Resource Center: World provides a full range of sources for
research:
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Over 22,000 reference articles and 500 “viewpoint” essays, from 32 reference sets
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Nearly 23,000 biographies
235,000 full-text articles from over 300 peer-reviewed periodicals and journals, and newswires
(and growing daily)
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Almost 3,600 maps and images
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Over 2,000 primary source documents, with many more on the way in 2007
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Audio and video clips covering historic events
Award-wining, authoritative reference content drawn from leading
imprints, including:
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Macmillan Reference USA, St. James Press, Primary Source Microfilm, and Charles
Scribner’s Sons
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Print reference and primary sources valued at more than $45,000!
History Resource Center: World is relevant your students’ research
needs
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Continuous updating—periodicals and newswire stories added daily
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“Spotlight” features tie current events together with their historical causes and origins
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…and Collegiate Study
The comprehensive collection of sources in History Resource Center:
World supports study across disciplines:
• One-stop resource for studies in: history, sociology, culture, religion, political science, gender
studies, geography, conflict, foreign policy and diplomatic relations, slavery, the World Wars,
the Age of Imperialism and in many other disciplines across the social sciences and
humanities
History Resource Center: World includes a wealth of academic content
• Essays on key topics in world history, written by the leading scholars, reviewed by their
peers and overseen by an editorial board of experts, all drawn from the top universities and
institutions in the world
• Hundreds of thousands of full-text articles from the top journals in world history studies, and
other related disciplines, providing a modern analysis of historical topics and events
In their own words and deeds:
• Primary sources provide first-hand accounts on some of the most notable events in world
history, from the Analects of Confucius to a letter from a Crusader to his wife, in 1098
• Audio and video accounts provide direct accounts and images of events as they unfolded,
from the Edison and the kinetoscope to Joseph Salk speaking about his polio vaccine
Fully cross-searchable with History Resource Center: U.S.!
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Mapping History RC to HISTORY Curriculum
African American History
Traces the developments which led to the African slave
trade, the slave systems in North and South America,
the cultural heritage of the African American in the
Americas, and the problems of race in North American
culture.
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Mapping History RC to HISTORY Curriculum
United States History to 1877
A political, legal, economic, social and cultural history
of the United States from colonial beginnings to 1877.
Topics may include European explorers; New
England, Middle Atlantic, and Southern colonies;
religious and commercial causes of English
colonization, America’s response to English colonial
policy, and the American Revolution; the
Confederation Period, Federalist Era, Jeffersonian
Era, and Jacksonian Democracy; Westward
expansion; and the Civil War and Reconstruction.
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Mapping History RC to HISTORY Curriculum
United States History, 1877-Present
A political, legal, economic, social, and cultural history
of the United States from the end of reconstruction to
the present. Topics may include Industrialization,
Immigration and Urbanization, Gilded Age Politics and
Populism, the Progressive Movement, WWI, the
Great Depression, and WWII.
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Mapping History RC to HUMANITIES Curriculum
American Civilization
This course will explore the cultural foundations of the
United States from the period of exploration to the
present. This is an interdisciplinary course which
examines central themes of American culture and their
representation in history, literature, art, philosophy, and
religion. Topics may include Native American cultures,
the impact of European settlers, the influence of
Puritanism, “The Great Awakening,” the Revolutionary
Age, slavery, the changing lives of Native Americans in
the 19th century, role and contributions of women, the
1930s Depression, American foreign policy in the “Third
World,” and women’s struggle for equality.
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