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The Ancient Greek World


Professor Phillips


Using Reference Material and the Library Catalog


Reference books:


Reference books, located in the reference area of the first floor, provide you with background information that can be helpful in developing a topic or thesis statement. You’ll find information about people, dates, events, statistics, places, definitions, terms, and concepts—in all subject areas. You may find these through our catalog, or better yet, ask a reference librarian to help you identify useful reference works in the subject area with which you are working. Below, I’ve listed a number of useful reference works for the study of classics and literature:


Ancient Greece and Rome : an Encyclopedia for Students
Ref. DE5 .A57 1998 4 volumes


Ancient Greek Authors
Ref. PS21 .D5x v.176
Dictionary of Literary Biography v. 176


Ancient Roman Writers
Ref. PS21 .D5x v.211 (1999)
Dictionary of Literary Biography v. 211


Atlas of the Greek World
Ref. DF77 .L43 1984


Atlas of the Roman World
Ref. DG77 .C597 1982


The Atlas of World Archaeology
Ref. CC165 .A85 2000


Civilization of the Ancient Mediterranean : Greece and Rome
Ref. DE59 .C55 1988 3 volumes


Encyclopedia of Modern Greek Literature
Ref. PA5210 .M44 2004


Encyclopedia of Women in the Ancient World
Ref. HQ1127 .S25 2001


The Greek and Latin Literatures
Ref. Z7018.T7 E85 1968


The Oxford Classical Dictionary, 3rd edition
Ref. DE5 .O9 2003


Thesaurus Linguae Graecae Canon of Greek Authors and Works
Ref. PA3051 .B47x 1990


Using the Library Catalog


Guide to using the Library catalog
http://www.lib.grinnell.edu/research/InstructionGuides/opac.html


What you need to know:

What kind of materials you can find in the catalog


Almost anything: music (scores and recordings), films, printed material, electronic material including web pages and databases. You can find almost anything except journal articles.


How to find material that you identify in the catalog


Check status (checked out or not?)
Check location (floor, special area within the library?)
Write down the entire call number
Ask for assistance if you are coming up short
Constructing a search in the catalog


If you are looking for a known item you can do either an author or a title search. For instance, you are looking for Essays on Aristotle's Poetics edited by Amélie Oksenberg Rorty. You can do a title search using the title, or an author search, last name first: Rorty, Amélie Oksenberg. These are “exact searches.” The computer wants the words in the right order. If you are looking for words on a particular topic you will do either a keyword or a subject search. Subject searches are also exact searches. A keyword search can be any combination of words of your choosing. You may need to know how to do a Boolean search.


See the guide for constructing a Boolean search. You also have a hand out on this
http://www.lib.grin.edu/research/InstructionGuides/booleanmodule.html

Possible keyword searches include:

Catharsis and hamartia
(Catharsis or hamartia) and aristotle
Aristotle and poetics
Aristotle and tragedy

Exact searches using the Library of Congress Subject Headings include:

Aristotle, Poetics
Aesthetics, Ancient
Comedy
Greek drama (Tragedy) -- History and criticism
Literature, Comparative -- Greek and English
Mimesis in literature
Poetics
Poetics – History
Tragedy
Tragedy -- Greek influences

 

 

Rebecca Stuhr, Grinnell College Libraries. October 2005
Stuhrr/3674

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