Trial access to The Atlantic Magazine Archive (1857–2014)

The Library currently has trial access to the The Atlantic Magazine Archive (1857–2014).

The digital archive covers events and political issues through literary and cultural commentary. It includes more than 1,800 issues providing a broad view of 19th, 20th and early 21st-Century American thought. The Atlantic was originally created with a focus on publishing leading writers’ commentary on abolition, education and other major issues in contemporary political affairs at the time. Over its more than 150 years of publication it has featured articles in the fields of politics, foreign affairs, business and the economy, culture and the arts, technology, science and more.

Access to theThe Atlantic Magazine Archive (1857–2014) is available on the Library Databases – E-Resources Trials page. Trial access is available until 25th February 2024. Please remember to give us feedback to help us make a decision about subscribing using the E-resources Trial Feedback Form.

Trial access to the Oxford Research Encyclopedia of Linguistics

The Library currently has trial access to the Oxford Research Encyclopedia of Linguistics.

The Oxford Research Encyclopedia of Linguistics includes more than 500 articles by renowned scholars from all over the world. Peer-reviewed and frequently updated, articles feature a wide array of resources, including audio-visual materials, links to digital archives, datasets, and other pedagogical tools.

From morphology to neurolinguistics, semantics to sociolinguistics and sign languages, the Oxford Research Encyclopedia of Linguistics aims to map, over time, the entire landscape of the world’s languages, weaving together the various historical, theoretical, and experimental approaches that make up the field of linguistics.

Access to the Oxford Research Encyclopedia of Linguistics is available on the Library Databases – E-Resources Trials page. Trial access is available until 18th February 2024. Please remember to give us feedback to help us make a decision about subscribing using the E-resources Trial Feedback Form.