The groundbreaking research experience uniting Gale's globally acclaimed digital and reference collections is here – Gale Artemis. This June 2013 webinar focused on using Artemis with your Gale primary source resources.
Eighteenth Century Collections Online (ECCO) Parts I and II and your Nineteenth Century Collections Online (NCCO) are now part of Gale Artemis, enabling researchers, faculty, and students to search across both collections and discover and analyze content in entirely new ways.
By integrating ECCO's power in monographs and NCCO's strength in manuscripts, periodicals, and photographs, Gale Artemis provides never-before-available opportunities to discover a wealth of materials and easily follow a theme or topic across two centuries.
2. Welcome!
What is Artemis?
WHY Artemis?
Artemis Today…(Shown to you live!)
Artemis Tomorrow…
3. Innovation
Gale is innovating again
• 1st to bring you journal databases!
• 1st to bring you resource centers!
• 1st to bring you e-Reference!
• And now - the 1st to bring you an
integrated research environment loaded
with tools and services
4. WHY Artemis?
You asked for it
“Bring together in a single
place the very best of
Gale’s publishing – digital
collections, research
materials, reference
materials, and more.”
“Create an environment
where my patrons/
students/researchers can
make new discoveries
with the content I’ve
acquired for them”
5. Gale’s Integrated Research Environment
Unifies Gale’s extensive digital humanities collections
Enables students and researchers to make never-before-possible (or
previously unavailable) research connections
Combines full-text content, metadata, and subject indexing enriched by
workflow and analytical technology
One place for discovery Better Access
Motivation for
Original
Research
A New Era of
Scholarship
6. Promoting Discovery and New Scholarship
• Brings to light new relationships
• Subject Indexing reveals related
concepts and terms
• Search across vast content sets:
both primary and secondary
materials
• Workflow tools open up avenues
for new analysis
7. Artemis - Value to your Researcher
• Students will be more deeply engaged better outcomes
and greater success
• Research environment reflects both students and faculty
workflows motivating original scholarship
• Creates a competitive advantage among institutions for
which serious research within the humanities is a central
focus
• Librarians will see greater return on investment and
increased use of their collections
• Searching in one place supports broader range of research
needs and academic disciplines
25. Thank you!
For more information and to sign up for a free
trial, please go to:
www.gdc.gale.com/gale-artemis/
Notas del editor
LitFinder:A Tale of Two Cities. Charles Dickens. London: Chapman and Hall, 1868. p[1]-220. From LitFinder.
Literature Criticism Online:"Introduction to Dickens, Charles (1812-1870)." Nineteenth-Century Literature Criticism. Ed. Janet Mullane and Robert Thomas Wilson. Vol. 26. Detroit: Gale Research, 1990.
Literature Criticism Online:Friedman, Barton R. "Antihistory: Dickens' A Tale of Two Cities." Fabricating History: English Writers on the French Revolution. Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press, 1988. 145-171. Rpt. in Nineteenth-Century Literature Criticism. Ed. Kathy D. Darrow. Vol. 239. Detroit: Gale, 2011.
Literature Resource Center:David, Deirdre. "Charles Dickens, A Tale of Two Cites and the French Revolution." Victorian Studies 52.4 (2010)
MLA InternationalBibliography:Collins, Philip. "A Tale of Two Novels: A Tale of Two Cities and Great Expectations in Dickens' Career." Dickens Studies Annual: Essays on Victorian Fiction 2 (1972): 336-51. MLA International Bibliography. Web. 17 June 2013.
Twayne’s Authors Online:"“One of These Days”: The Genesis of A Tale of Two Cities." A Tale of Two Cities: Dicken's Revolutionary Novel. Ruth Glancy. Boston: Twayne Publishers, 1991. 19-27. Twayne's Masterwork Studies 89.
ECCO:Mackintosh, James. An historical sketch of the French Revolution from its commencement to the year 1792. London: printed for J. Debrett, opposite Burlington House, Piccadilly, M.DCC.XCII. [1792]. Eighteenth Century Collections OnlineSome account of British subjects who have suffered by the French Revolution. 1794. London: printed by J. P. Coghlan, No. 37. Duke Street, Grosvenor Square, [1794]. Eighteenth Century Collections Online
NCCO:Julia St. Pierre: a tale of the French revolution. N.p.: E. Lloyd, and sold by all booksellsers, [1848]. Nineteenth Century Collections Online
NCCO:Bronterre. "The First French Revolution of 1789. Its Veritable Character. Robespierre and the True Democratic." Bronterre's National Reformer, in Government, Law, Property, Religion, and Morals I.10 (1837): 76+. Nineteenth Century Collections Online.
Show examples – 4 representing different productsCheck SAS, BLMO, move DLB here
Dictionary of Literary Biography:Victorian Novelists Before 1885. Ed. Ira Bruce Nadel and William E. Fredeman. Dictionary of Literary BiographyVol. 21. Detroit: Gale Research, 1983. From Literature Resource Center.
19th Century U.K. Periodicals:CHARLES DICKENS'S LEGACY TO ENGLAND. Fun (London, England), Saturday, June 25, 1870; pg. 157. New Readerships.
Slavery and Anti-Slavery:Chapter on Slavery. Charles Dickens. Liberty Standard, Maine, United States),Wednesday, December 21, 1842; Issue 20Dickens’ thoughts on slavery
19th Century U.S. Newspapers:The New York Herald, (New York, NY) Sunday, February 27, 1842; Issue 343; col B Charles Dickens and the Plymouth LadiesCharles Dickens.Letter from Charles Dickens regarding a lock of hair he gave to some ladies in Plymouth, MA.
The Times Digital Archive, 1785-2006:"The Bastille." Times [London, England] 6 Aug. 1789Article about the storming of the Bastille