Thanks to Taylor Robinson for the following helpful post!
You will need your library card!
Go to cals.org
Click Research and References A to Z.
Click on "Academic Search Elite."
Click on "Choose Databases" when the search engine comes up.
Check the boxes for: MasterFile premium, ERIC, and eBook Collection.
Type "The Dickensian A Tale of Two Cities" into the Search Engine.
Repeat these steps with each of the different sources.
The Main Library says on the website that they have copies of Victorian Studies, Nineteenth-Century Literature, and PMLA. The library has currently misplaced Victorian Studies though.
Most of the articles are available in full text to print off of the Ebscohost Database.
Good luck!
Taylor Robinson
10 comments:
i didnt find anything except the victorian studies and the nineteenth century literature
Good! Then you found two of the journals! Now find 5 articles in those two journals.
Mr. Foster, is it okay if I use two academic journals that provide good literary criticisms of the book but arn't on our list and don't necessarily have any special connection to Dickens (aka: they don't have "Dickens" anywhere in the title of the journal)?
Yes. It is okay as long as you are sure they are valid, credible sources. Use your best judgement. Thanks for asking.
Mr.Foster, I've searched all of the scholarly journals and haven't found any of the online copies. I found one for the 19th century fiction, but it didn't have the full article listed on the website. Other then that I found a literary criticism on the charters of A tale of Two cities, would that work? I'm going to keep searching for 1 or 2 more sources, but I'd really like to know if the character article would work.
Thanks
Lucky blog readers, conscientious students, good news. If you have found helpful and good articles in other VALID scholarly publications besides the ones I gave you, feel free to use them on your annotated bib assignment. Just know there's a slight risk involved. Good rule of thumb: if you found the article on EBSCO, or a similar research "engine," you're probably A-OK. Feel free to keep asking questions, and feel free to give each other advice right here. I'll answer questions as quickly and accurately as I can. Good luck, and see you all Tuesday and Wednesday.
Bilal, the character article sounds like a good one. Use your best judgement. Is it a valid, credible source? Would you use it on a real, college, research paper?
Do you want us to print out the actual articles and have a hard copy to hand in during class??
Yes. Hard copies should be tuned in with your critical annotations.
*turned in*
iPhone typing...
Post a Comment