JSTOR

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Searching best practices on JSTOR

Hi Tumblr researchers,

As promised, we’re going to dive into some best practices for searching on JSTOR. This’ll be a long one!

The first thing to note is that JSTOR is not Google, so searches should not be conducted in the same way.

More on that in this video:

Basic Search on JSTOR

  • To search for exact phrases, enclose the words within quotation marks, like “to be or not to be”.
  • To construct a more effective search, utilize Boolean operators, such as “tea trade” AND china.

Advanced Searching on JSTOR

  • Utilize the drop-down menus to refine your search parameters, limiting them to the title, author, abstract, or caption text.
  • Combine search terms using Boolean operators like AND/OR/NOT and NEAR 5/10/25. The NEAR operator finds keyword combinations within 5, 10, or 25 words of each other. It applies only when searching for single keyword combinations, such as “cat NEAR 5 dog,” but not for phrases like “domesticated cat” NEAR 5 dog.
  • Utilize the “Narrow by” options to search for articles exclusively, include/exclude book reviews, narrow your search to a specific time frame or language.
  • To focus your article search on specific disciplines and titles, select the appropriate checkboxes. Please note that discipline searching is currently limited to journal content, excluding ebooks from the search.

Finding Content You Have Access To

To discover downloadable articles, chapters, and pamphlets for reading, you have the option to narrow down your search to accessible content. Simply navigate to the Advanced Search page and locate the “Select an access type” feature, which offers the following choices:

image

All Content will show you all of the relevant search results on JSTOR, regardless of whether or not you can access it.

Content I can access will show you content you can download or read online. This will include Early Journal Content and journals/books publishers have made freely available.

Once you’ve refined your search, simply select an option that aligns with your needs and discover the most relevant items. Additionally, you have the option to further narrow down your search results after conducting an initial search. Look for this option located below the “access type” checkbox, situated at the bottom left-hand side of the page.

Additional resources

For more search recommendations, feel free to explore this page on JSTOR searching. There, you will find information on truncation, wildcards, and proximity, using fields, and metadata hyperlinks.

Pinned Post happy researching!!! jstor research academic research academic writing academia academic database searching higher education students colleges university learning teaching librarians libraries Youtube studyblr ref
smolsleepyfox

smolsleepyfox asked:

Not really a question, I'm writing my bachelor's thesis on the representation of monstrosity and gender in metal music and I found so much good stuff on jstor, thank you :3

jstor answered:

satanicallypanicky

GIVE US THE DOIs, @smolsleepyfox

smolsleepyfox

How the FUCK did this get so many notes so quickly???? Alright, I had to wait for the ibuprofen to hit (headache) but now I'm at my laptop.

My impetus for the thesis was actually just "hello I like Powerwolf (German power metal band who sings about horny Catholic werewolves)". And I somehow managed to make an academic topic out of that. I'm only just starting out, I have like. 3 pages of text but here's what I got:

Chapter 1 is about conceptions of monstrosity - what is a monster? Why? The basic text you need for this is Jeffrey Jerome Cohen's Monster Theory. He's probably THE monster scholar, and his seven theses are a fantastically concise way of defining what monsters. (Very simplified: They symbolize cultural anxieties and rules by breaking them.) I also very much enjoyed Religion and its Monsters as well as the Ashgate Research Companion to Monsters and Monstrosity. The latter I would also consider essential reading, because it spans a broad number of topics and approaches in like twenty essays.

There's also Monsters, Gender and Sexuality in Medieval English Literature by Dana Oswald. I'm going at this from a historical perspective because Powerwolf as my main example is heavily based in biblical language and folklore and I just kinda like reading about medieval ways of thinking.

The next two parts of the chapter will be about gender (presentation) and the werewolf. For gender stuff, Judith Butler is pretty much required reading, but I've also looked at Michel Foucault's ideas on Discipline and Sexuality. I read the abbreviated texts in Literary Analysis: An Anthology because anything else would be insane. Dana Oswald (author of he book about middle english monsters) also wrote about monstrous gender in the Ashgate reserach companion. Oh and I really need to reread Judith/Jack Halberstam's Female masculinity, because gender transgressions are a major part of conceiving monstrosity throughout history. Frankenstein has been researched to death (pun intended), but there's also aspects of gender in Dracula.

I'm still looking for research on werewolves but so far I got some interesting info on localized legends from the German/Flemish/Dutch border region and interpretations of historic literature such as from Iceland. I also learned about the shared conceptions of werewolves by medieval Christians and Jews. And lastly, there is a master's thesis about female werewolves that I found extremely interesting. All in all, the werewolf is both at the border between beast and man as well as exceeding gender roles through hypermasculinity and possibly aberrant sexuality. I'll probably have to write something about witches too because there's some parallels between the treatment of suspected werewolves and witches, but that definitely needs more research.

My current plan for the thesis as a whole is to to relate monsters and werewolves to the broader aesthetic of metal music, where the breaking of societal boundaries is part of the scene's identity. (Heavy Fundamentalisms has some great articles.) There's of course the warrior image that plays a part in some subgenres but the genre as a whole can be interpreted as playing with monstrosity through sound (harsh vocals), behavior (moshing) and looks (corpse paint).
Powerwolf specifically imagines their shows as a Catholic mass while wearing corpse paint and singing about blood and sex. (Similar to Ghost, which is why I'm honestly baffled PW isn't more popular on tumblr.) Their artworks often show werewolves as knights, church authorities and on the cover of the album Call of the Wild even as God. It's kind of flip flopping between the wolf keeping the faith and submitting to the wildness while both is depicted as interesting/desirable in a way, so that's a fun dynamic to explore. They don't actually have a "canon" but the themes are fairly consistent. In the past albums they've also had some women protagonists but they're notably not werewolves, so that will absolutely be something to discuss.

Anyway, go check out Powerwolf, power metal is pretty easy to get into and their live shows are fun.

jstor

Checking out Powerwolf expeditiously

for those of you who were interested in foxy's thesis here's the update!
A variety of pies and cakes on a counter.ALT

For those of you interested in modern and contemporary art, Art Resource recently added around 750 new images to JSTOR–featuring iconic figures like Georgia O'Keefe and Jacob Lawrence.

Learn more about the collection in our recent blog post.

Image: Wayne Thiebaud. Pie Counter, 1963. Oil on canvas. © Whitney Museum of American Art / Licensed by Scala / Art Resource, NY

jstor artstor art resource modern art contemporary art wayne thiebaud research art history

skykid-nadir asked:

Thank you for introducing me to my favorite gay werewolf, Bisclavret! I stumbled on his story while researching a medical history paper and became obsessed with him and his king who he "held close and private and his heart" and whom he "kissed over 100 times" on being cured of lycanthropy.

Truly the ultimate bros. Just good old medieval guys being dudes

A couple of buddies, nothing more…

jstor ask i am looking into this as we speak btw

We were tagged by @spicyblue :) I’ll be answering as the mod!

Rules: answer + tag nine (or however many) people you want to get to know better and/or catch up with!

Favorite Color: Green (with a particular love for olive shades)

Last song I listened to: The Louvre by Lorde

Last film I watched: The King on Netflix

Currently reading: I’m between books at the moment, but probably going to start Stoner by John Williams soon!

Currently watching: Twin Peaks: The Return

Currently craving: Orange and pomegranate San Pellegrino

Coffee or Tea?: Coffee!

Feel free to do this and say JSTOR tagged you 😉

jstor what are these called? tag games?
peardita
sugarsnappeases

returning to the arms of my lover (jstor) oh how i have missed her

jstor

sugarsnappeases

omg hiiiiiiii baby <333 literally swooning as we speak, blushing, twirling my hair, kicking my feet, nobody look at me

jstor

We'll pick you up later

peardita

#jstor #hey disclaimer? i didn't know it was the 23rd shrek release date anniversary when i posted this but now i'm committed to the bit (via @jstor)

an old Shrek CRT tv with a green keyboard, logo that says "ShrekSTOR", and screen-cap of the JSTOR.org homepage lovingly edited onto itALT
a JSTOR.org search for "shrek" displaying 1,202 resultsALT
kid clicking a computer mouse, then looking at the camera and giving a thumbs up while nodding in approvalALT
jstor

Oh wow

jstor this is incredible