Anthropology is a very broad description encapsulating elements of many different subjects such as language, linguistics, religion, music, art, childhood studies and the environment. The University Library uses the Dewey Decimal Classification scheme (go to http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dewey_decimal for a quick introduction) to organise books and other materials; anthropology is at 301 and 306, part of social science, and can be found on Floor 6 of The Sir Duncan Rice Library.
This guide aims to give you a very quick introduction to the library and the various resources available to you. If you would like any further information or help with finding and using resources please contact either the Social Science Subject Team based on Floor 6 of The Sir Duncan Rice Library or email the Information Consultant for anthropology, Claire Molloy: c.a.l.molloy@abdn.ac.uk .
New to the Library?
Finding Resources
You can use Primo to find items to read, particularly where you have been given details in a reading list but we have other tools you can use to find even more. Resources such as AnthropologyPlus (http://search.ebscohost.com /) are really useful as they allow to search for scholarly literature, that might mean articles from peer-reviewed journals or book review and reports. AnthropologyPlus brings together into one resource the highly respected Anthropological Literature from Harvard University and the Anthropological Index, Royal Anthropological Institute, based on the journal holdings of The Anthropology Library at the British Museum which receives periodicals in all branches of anthropology from academic institutions and publishers around the world. A quick guide is available online .
Other useful resources include International Bibliography of the Social Sciences (IBSS): http://www.proquest.com/shibboleth produced by the London School of Economics and covers social and cultural anthropology, sociology, education, economics, and the political sciences. It provides access to over 2.5 million references dating back to 1951 and current data is taken from over 2,800 selected journals and around 7000 books per annum. A quick guide is available online .
We pay a lot of money for resources such as these and you will have to log in to read anything you find - check out the relevant library guide for details.
Berghahn Open Anthro https://www.berghahnjournals.com/page/berghahn-open-anthro Launched in 2020, Berghahn Open Anthro is a subscribe-to-open model being piloted by Berghahn Books in partnership with Libraria.
EVIA Digital Archive Project: https://media.eviada.org/eviadasb/home.php is a joint effort of Indiana University and the University of Michigan to establish a digital archive of ethnographic video for use by scholars and instructors. Media in the EVIA Project consists of video collections that have been selected for inclusion by an editorial committee, and annotations have gone through a scholarly review process. The content of the Archive represents the culmination of preservation, annotation, and editorial work. It is free to register and use.
Social Theory: https://search.alexanderstreet.com/soth offers an extensive selection of documents that explore the complexities and interpret the nature of social behaviour and organization. The collection includes more than 122,000 pages from 346 works by 100 authors. Highlights include 33 volumes of the Complete Works of Marx and Engels and nearly 26,000 pages of German language content. Our quick guide is available online .
The Directory of Open Access Journals (DOAJ) https://doaj.org covers open access journal from across the world and across many disciplines.
The Hathi Trust https://www.hathitrust.org Founded in 2008, HathiTrust is a not-for-profit collaborative of academic and research libraries preserving 17+ million digitized items. Anyone can view public domain materials - some is not protected by copyright.
Box of Broadcasts (BOB) https://learningonscreen.ac.uk/ondemand contains BBC broadcasts since 1990s and permanent archive of BBC, ITV and Channel 4 and related broadcasts as well as recordings of 65 free to air tv channels - millions of broadcasts. Saved lists, create clips...
Resources by Geographical Region
There are lots of Open Access (OA) and other resources available - OA means that these are free to read, whereas other resources may require you to log in (like AntPlus and IBSS) to search and log in to read anything you find.
Reference Management
You might find it useful to organise the references you have found. There are many different free and 'freemium' resources available to help you with your reference management. Try using Wikipedia's reference management software comparison document. UoA currently subscribe to RefWorks:
https://refworks.proquest.com/
Questions?
Contact the Information Consultant for anthropology, Claire Molloy: c.a.l.molloy@abdn.ac.uk
Last revised by Claire Molloy, August 2023