tagged [none]
by okrent
...on 23-MAR-08
Includes digitized images of the pages of 1,100 American magazines and journals published from colonial days to the dawn of the 20th century. Titles range from Benjamin Franklin's General Magazine and America's first scientific journal, Medical Repository, to popular magazines (some still in print), such as Vanity Fair, Harper's and Ladies' Home Journal.
tagged [none]
by okrent
...on 23-MAR-08
Excellent interface for searching and retrieval. Includes images and advertisements.
tagged [none]
by okrent
...on 23-MAR-08
Database of law reviews and other legal periodicals published between the 19th century and the present.
tagged [none]
by okrent
...on 23-MAR-08
A digital library of 18th and 19th century British journals, including the Annual Register, Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine, Gentleman's Magazine, Notes and Queries, Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society, and the Builder.
tagged [none]
by okrent
...on 23-MAR-08
Historical backfiles of American Medical Association publications, including the Journal of the American Medical Association and subject specific journals, 1883-present.
tagged [none]
by okrent
...on 12-JAN-09
Collection of over 20 19th century magazines available online, many of which are not included in the American Periodical Series. Includes Putnam's Monthly and Scribner's.
tagged [none]
by okrent
...on 21-APR-09
Collection of over 20 19th century magazines available online, many of which are not included in the American Periodical Series. Includes Appleton's, Ladies Repository, Southern Literary Messenger, and others.
tagged [none]
by okrent
...on 21-APR-09
Weekly magazine of politics and culture offering a consistently liberal, left wing perspective.
tagged [none]
by okrent
...on 23-MAR-08
Scientific journal that also provides coverage of issues of general interest to scientists and laymen. Its early years, in particular, are notable for its attempt to make scientific discoveries accessable to a general audience of educated non-scientists. During the 20th century it has become a more standard scientific journal.
tagged [none]
by okrent
...on 23-MAR-08

