
Every student of history should locate and tour pertinent UO collections. To be a historian without close personal familiarity with libraries is like being a physicist without close personal familiarity with laboratories.
Here are some useful thoughts about "reading" in the academic setting. Hop to this [TXT], then come back here.
And here is a table of contents guiding
you to eight rich UofO research/reading locations which you should know about = KNIGHT Reserve Book Room Hop directly to
JANUS ELECTRONIC CATALOG KNIGHT LIBRARY reserve book room [RBR] Access any course
reserve book room list. Some films (movies) of use to the historian, and housed in RBR Notice how some of the items on reserve are also found in the KNIGHT stacks.
Click to connect directly to JANUS
ELECTRONIC CATALOG THE
UO MAP LIBRARY or MAP ROOM [MAP] Here you will find several globes which will work very well
for a little experiment. Look at Russia’s position and its bulk on any one of
these largish globes. Lift the globe and position the southwestern Siberian city
Novosibirsk in the center of your field of vision. Notice how much of the world
land mass is located in the hemisphere before your eyes. Check the exact
opposite hemisphere. That other side is largely Pacific Ocean. Using your thumb and little finger as compass points stretching over the oval surface of your
globe, measure some of the following distances = Carry these manual compass stretches one at a time to Eugene
OR ("transpose" these distances with your thumb and little finger as compass
points) in order to see how far from Eugene you would have to go to equal those historical distances. Do the same for the
distances among and between these European cities: (1) Moscow, (2) Berlin, (3) Paris, and (4) London. Teach yourself how to sketch by hand the map
or maps most essential to your work this term.
HIST 245 Click here to return to syllabus KNIGHT REFERENCE DIVISION [REF]
The
Great Soviet Encyclopedia [GSE]. Always begin your search by
looking up your keyword in the last, index volume of GSE. The
Modern Encyclopedia of Russian and Soviet History [MERSH]
Dictionary of Russian Historical
Terms from the Eleventh Century to 1917 by Sergei Pushkarev Dictionary of Literary Biography = Batalden, Stephen K. The
newly independent states of Eurasia : handbook of former Soviet republics Leaders of Russia and the
Soviet Union [LR&S] Biographical Dictionary
of Dissidents [USSR], 1956-75 Check this University of Illinois
GUIDE TO SOURCES ON RUSSIAN HISTORY AND HISTORIOGRAPHY Dictionary of American
history New York : Scribner, c1976-c1978 A
dictionary of American history / Thomas L. Purvis | Cambridge, Mass. :
Blackwell, 1995 Click to connect directly to
JANUS ELECTRONIC CATALOG The range of European and world historical reference = D11.CS74 | Chronology of the Modern World, 1763-1992 REF D21 ....| Encyclopedias of world history REF D419... to D1051....| Encyclopedias and dictionaries of 20th-c. Europe There are important reference guides beyond the first floor = Raymond Pearson, Russia and Eastern Europe, 1789-1985: A
Bibliographical Guide Materials on the Internet For some suggestions about the internet as storehouse of information, try this
Basket of Websites The internet encyclopedia Wikipedia
is a handy reference work always available when you are working "on-line" Archival guides No attempt is made here to list a complete bibliography of
archival guides, but one has been digitalized and is available on the web = Grant, Steven A., and John H. Brown, The Russian Empire and
Soviet Union: A Guide to Manuscripts and Archival Materials in the United States KNIGHT Information Technology Center For now, just find out where this facility is located, KNIGHT stacks Take five-ten minutes to browse a Knight Library shelf range that contains publications
relating to the history of one large territorial nation-state pertinent to our
course. I do want you to get a visual sense of just how big our topic is, as
seen in our fine but not really huge library. But you need not be overwhelmed.
In fact, I would like to help you relax a bit about this miniature, five-ten
minute physical imitation of "research". If you had to ponder these shelves at
length, searching for titles that might help you as a researcher (perhaps
later for a seminar paper or senior thesis, etc.), you could do it. For now,
you might notice when you sort the course reserve book list
by call-number that many of the reserved titles cluster within one Library of Congress
call-number range. That would be a good range to walk past. For one thing, there are copies of some
reserve-book room titles on the regular shelves and thus available to
you for the longer check-out period. DK = (Russia and the peoples of the Russian and Soviet empires).
Calm yourself about the overwhelming number of Russian history books there,
and about the fact that so many of them are in Russian. Our course is an
introductory undergraduate survey. But at the next level, foreign language is
to history as calculus is to physics. But relax, we're not trying to reach
that next level just yet. If you were to take the next step as historian, after taking courses like ours, you would need
reading fluency in English and two to four foreign languages, one of them at the highest
possible level of competence. "Making"
modern European history is not really possible without knowledge of
English, French, German and Russian. Here are some other ranges= DA... (England and peoples of the British Isles) These endless shelves seem overwhelming, and DK
is just one of several concentration points of Russian culture and history in
our library. You could check PG.... Then there is the whole new alpha-range= E = (The Americas, including USA) UO JORDAN SCHNITZER MUSEUM OF ART [W] While walking from Knight Library to the Art and Architecture
Library, drop in on the UO Art Museum. All historians of Russia should visit the
Icon collection there. Here is a photo of the mock-up iconostasis as it was
originally designed and built in the Museum =
Here is a close-up of the the icon at the top center
of the photo above =
KNIGHT MAP Room
KNIGHT Reference Division
KNIGHT stacks
KNIGHT
Information Technology Center
Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art
Architecture & Allied Arts
Library [W]
Jaqua Law School Library [W]
You might want to print the list for this course, sorted BY AUTHOR.
From the stacks you may check out all but a few
restricted titles for two weeks.
(& other catalog services)
HIST 303 Click here to return to syllabus
HIST 345 Click here to return to syllabus
HIST 346 Click here to return to syllabus for more MAP
ROOM exercises
*--Here is a digitized website with TXT of the Russian
original of GSE, IE= Bol'shaia Sovetskaia
Entsiklopediia [BSE]
*--MERSH entries include bibliographies that could be of great use in your essays
*--FURTHERMORE =
HERE IS SAC's VERY OWN ELECTRONIC TABLE OF CONTENTS FOR MERSH
volume 150, "Early modern Russian writers: late-seventeenth and eighteenth c."
volume 198,
"Russian literature in the age of Pushkin and Gogol. Prose"
volume 205,
"Russian literature in the age of Pushkin and Gogol. Poetry and drama"
volume 238, "Russian novelists in the age of Tolstoy and Dostoevsky"
volume 272, "Russian
prose writers between the world wars"
volume 277, "Russian literature in the
Age of Realism"
volume 285,
"Russian
writers since 1980"
volume 295, "Russian writers of the
Silver Age, 1890-1925"
(& other catalog services)
with excellent indexes, especially the following =
D11.M39 | Chronology of World History 4 vols
STUDENT REVIEW=
While I'm sure it's probably far from complete, it's a quite helpful listing of materials relating to a wide number of topics -- from general histories to
materials relating to science, art, and culture, national minorities, the Tsarist government, and into the Soviet period. Most helpfully, for each topic
there seems to be a guide to primary source materials in English as well as all sorts of categorized secondary source citations. Glancing through
it, everything seems to be in English, too.
*--Here, as everywhere, but especially here, be cautious about what you find
*--Never cite
Wikipedia in your journal or research work, on any topic, without comparing the Wikipedia account
with other reference or textbook sources, and/or SAC, and citing them together
*--Here is a thought-provoking SAC entry on Wikipedia
on the lowest level of the library, on the far western extreme of the building.
We may have occasion, as a whole class, to view films in the studios of the Media Services Division
DB... (Austria)
DC... (France)
DD... (Germany)
DH... & DJ... (Lowlands=Belgium, Netherlands)
DL... (Scandinavia=Norway, Sweden, Finland)
DP... (Spain)
DQ... (Switzerland)
DR... (Balkans:Serbia,Croatia, Bulgaria, etc.)
DS... (Asia--Central..., Near East)
DT... (Africa)
DU... (Austria and Pacific islands)
DX... (Romani [Gypsies])
(located just NE of Knight Library)![]()
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Icon: Christ Pantocrator Enthroned
Rublev School. Late 15th Century
University of Oregon Museum of Art
Murray Warner Collection of Oriental Art
MWR34:17
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