Searchable full-text and page images of over 170 periodicals from 1825-1995, published in 26 states, by and about African Americans.Includes academic and political journals, commercial magazines, institutional newsletters, organizations' bulletins, and annual reports. Acquired through a grant from the Resources Legacy Fund to honor Artemis G. Kirk, University Librarian Emeritus, for the library collections in the field of African-American, African and History of Slavery Studies.
Southern African history, politics, and culture in streaming video, spanning from 1916's De Voortrekkers: Winning A Continent to the 2011 documentary Thato. Includes feature films, documentaries, and newsreels.
African Diaspora, 1860-Present allows scholars to discover the migrations, communities, and ideologies of the African Diaspora through the voices of people of African descent. With a focus on communities in the Caribbean, Brazil, India, United Kingdom, and France, the collection contains primary source documents, including personal papers, organizational papers, journals, newsletters, court documents, letters, and ephemera.
Acquired through a grant from the Resources Legacy Fund to honor Artemis G. Kirk, University Librarian Emeritus, for the library collections in the field of African-American, African and History of Slavery Studies.
Nineteenth century African newspapers from the British Library's collection. Features nearly 60 newspapers from across the African continent, all published before 1900. Acquired through a grant from the Resources Legacy Fund to honor Artemis G. Kirk, University Librarian Emeritus, for the library collections in the field of African-American, African and History of Slavery Studies.
A growing collection of more than 100,000 items, preserving the social, cultural, and political dimensions of Indigenous communities around the world, through original voices. Includes blogs, digital magazines, videos, podcasts, online newspapers, and other materials that convey real experiences, heritage, and activism.
Preserves items, mainstream and ephemeral, that document the history of social change related to LGBTQ+ culture. Includes more than 100,000 blogs, magazines, videos, podcasts, tweets, underground zines, and other new media.
Digitized archive of the Rand Daily Mail, a leading newspaper of Johannesburg, South Africa. Coverage is from 1902 to 1985. Acquired through a grant from the Resources Legacy Fund to honor Artemis G. Kirk, University Librarian Emeritus, for the library collections in the field of African-American, African and History of Slavery Studies.