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Social and Cultural History: Letters and
Diaries Online
Until now, history researchers have had access to two main
kinds of electronic resources. On the one hand are the newspapers,
reporting condensed, third-person descriptions of selected events as
they occur. On the other hand are the reference and journal databases,
whose articles present retrospective interpretations.
Alexander Street’s social and cultural history projects offer something
entirely new and critically important—personal, contemporaneous, and
first-person accounts, history as experienced by the individuals who
lived through and created it. These are primary documents in the truest
sense. Previously unheard voices of ordinary people, regional and
diverse, fill the collections alongside those of famous figures.
Social and Cultural History: Letters and Diaries Online
Imagine seeing into the minds of tens of thousands of individuals and
knowing the details of their lives within seconds. Social and
Cultural History: Letters and Diaries Online allows today’s readers
to feel and understand what it was like to be a person of any time,
race, ethnicity, or gender, experiencing the past viscerally—through
personal and private writings presented as searchable full-text
documents, audio files, images, and online videos. The most
comprehensive archive of social memory yet created, Letters and
Diaries Online is the ideal starting point for historians,
sociologists, genealogists, linguists, and psychologists who want to
explore and analyze human experiences.
Heard together at last
The first-person narratives of people from diverse groups, famous and
ordinary, and from all walks of life, can at last be heard together, in
writings that are frank, detailed, and personal. In their own words,
people across time and place tell us about their lives, loves, careers,
challenges, accomplishments, spiritual paths, identity struggles,
political activities, and countless other life events. There are
contemporaneous letters, diaries, interviews, and speeches by women from
around the world discussing life events ranging from childbirth to death
of a child, political figures describing how they became activists,
American Civil War soldiers writing from the battlefields and from
hospitals, and immigrants describing ship passages and first impressions
of America.
Brought together under a new, unified search interface are all the
letters, diaries, and personal narratives in various Alexander Street
individual collections (including North American Women's Letters and
Diaries, British and Irish Women's Letters and Diaries,
The American Civil War: Letters and Diaries, Oral History Online,
and others) as well as content from a wide range of other sources. Much
of the material is in-copyright, rare, ephemeral, and available nowhere
else, including all the interviews from the Ellis Island Oral History
Research Center, exclusive Black Panther oral histories in full-text and
audio, and many previously unseen letters and diaries. A vast index to
oral histories from archives and repositories around the world links to
full text, audio, and video whenever available. At least 550,000 pages
are from Alexander Street’s proprietary databases, with hundreds of
thousands of additional narratives drawn from other online sources
everywhere. There will be 15,000 new pages added exclusively to
Letters and Diaries Online annually, appearing in no other Alexander
Street collections.
Alexander Street’s Semantic Indexing makes everything searchable
together, including the Web resources, for a consolidated search result.
Searches like these are easy from a single screen:
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Find letters written by children to their fathers during the American
Civil War.
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Find passages written by immigrants who arrived through Ellis Island on
the topic of becoming a citizen. How do they compare to passages written
by immigrants who arrived through West Coast locations?
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Do
diary entries written by women in the eighteenth century describe
childbirth?
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How
do diary passages written by women on the subject of love to men differ
from letters they wrote to other women?
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Find oral histories by black narrators on the subject of polio.
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Play audio files of World War II veterans born in Ohio discussing
bombing missions.
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Show videos of
jazz musicians of the twentieth century.
Examples of rare
and otherwise inaccessible content
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The Ellis Island
Oral History Project’s 35,000 pages of interviews, including audio
links, published for the first time and available exclusively through
Alexander Street;
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More than 2,000
Black Panther oral histories gathered by David Hilliard, former chief of
staff and now an educator in Oakland, California—also exclusively
through Alexander Street, along with full-page color images;
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Letters and
diaries from London’s Imperial War Museum, written by women who served
in both world wars, exclusively online from Alexander Street;
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An Alexander
Street-commissioned translation from Yiddish of the diary of a teenage
boy who arrived in Philadelphia from Lithuania in the early nineteenth
century, describing his personal coming of age and five years of his
observations of American culture during the Roaring Twenties;
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Access to the
oral histories from thousands of archives around the world that are free
on the Web but virtually un-findable without the Letters and Diaries
Online unified search index.
PUBLICATION
DETAILS
Social and Cultural History: Letters and Diaries Online is available
on the Web through annual subscription, with prices scaled to materials
budget. Libraries that have purchased perpetual rights to one or more of the
Alexander Street collections of letters and diaries will pay reduced
subscription rates.
Contact
sales@alexanderstreet.com or your sales representative
for information about
other titles in our Social and Cultural History series, including
The Sixties; Twentieth
Century Advice Literature: North American Guides on Race, Gender, Sex, and
the Family; The Gilded Age; and The American Civil War Online.
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