Appalachian State University
Library & Online Resources for:
CONFLICT OF CHURCH & STATE IN
LATIN AMERICA
for HIS 4100 - Dr. Rene Horst
Prepared by Allan Scherlen - Jan. 30, 2003
ENCYCLOPEDIAS
- (Getting basic background for your research topic)
Cambridge Encyclopedia of
Latin America and the Caribbean. 2nd ed. Cambridge: Cambridge University
Press, 1992.
Visually attractive volume arranged by subject areas, each of which provides
an excellent introduction. The work aims to cover as many topics as possible.
There are bibliographies of works in English, plus useful maps and tables.
[ASU Main Stacks F1406 .C36 1985 ]
Encyclopedia of Latin American
History and Culture. 5 vols. New York : Scribner's; Macmillan Library
Reference USA, 1996.
[ASU Reference F1406 .E53 1996 v.1-5 ]
| TIP: See
"Anticlericalism" article in Vol. 1 and follow a name or
topic in small CAPS to its articles. Each encyclopedia article has
a bibliography of books and articles on the topic. |
Encyclopedia of Contemporary Latin American and Caribbean Cultures.
3 vols. London ; New York : Routledge, 2000
[ASU Reference F1406 .E515 2000 v.1-3]
ATLASES
Historical Atlas of Latin
America. NY: Cooper Square Pub., 1969.
[ASU Ref F1408 .W66 1967 ]
INDEXES
TO ARTICLES & BOOKS
Historical
Abstracts. Santa Barbara, Calif.: ABC-Clio, 1955- . The best known
index for history, this covers the world since 1492 (except the U. S.
and Canada). It covers Latin America fairly well, but should be used in
conjunction with The Handbook of Latin American Studies
Handbook of Latin American
Studies. Gainesville: Univ. of Florida Pr, 1935- . Annual.
A serial bibliography based at the Hispanic Division of the Library of
Congress that provides selective, annotated information about books and
journal articles. An attractive feature of the print version is the presentation
by noted scholars of bibliographic overviews for each field and many subfields.
Since 1964 the volumes alternate coverage every year between social sciences
and humanities. The online version is complete since 1935.
[ASU REFERENCE Z 1605 .H23];
[URL: http://lcweb2.loc.gov/hlas/]
ATLA
Religion Index - Covers religious and theological literature,
including anthropology and history.
For Articles on Current Latin America:
See INFO-LATINOAMERICA,
1988-present
Academic Search Elite,
1984-present; Full Text: 1990-present
InfoTrac OneFile,
1980-present
BOOKS
ASU
LIBRARY CATALOG
Search three-library consortium of ASU, UNCA, and WCU for books available
with a couple of days..
Search by Subject [Example: Church and State - Latin America]
or by Keyword [Example: church and state and Mexico and
history]
TIP: When
a relevant book is found by keyword in the Library Catalog, find
others that are similar by clicking on the subject headings assigned
to it.
TIP: Examine the works cited (bibliography) at
the end of books found for references to other works in the area of
your interest. Also examine works cited for references to primary
sources used by the authors. Get those through interlibrary loan
(see below). |
To Find Books from Other
Libraries:
WorldCat
Search over 40 million records cataloged by libraries throughout the
world. Primarily books, but also includes manuscripts, videotapes
and other formats. Use this to search for primary sources, such as
correspondence and diaries of major players, diplomatic dispatches, official
state decrees and legislation, etc.
PRIMARY SOURCES
A primary information source is a record of events that are described or
recorded by
someone who either participated in or witnessed the events firsthand. Examples
include
newspaper accounts, letters, diaries, notebooks, and interviews.
Some primary materials can be found at ASU Library.
Examples include:
1) Published writings of figures in Latin American History
such as: Simon Bolivar, Manuel González Prada, and Bartolome De Las
Casas.
2) Newspaper articles covering historical events in Latin
America during the time found in
New York Times from 1857 to the present on microfilm is indexed
in The New York Times Index. The index is located at ASU Reference
AI21 .N452
Most older primary materials related to church/state relations in Latin
American history will need to be obtained through interlibrary loan from
larger research institutions which archive them (Use ILL
form in Quick Links or WorldCat
to request them.) Expect to wait at least a week or two
for your ILL materials to arrive.
And if you feel like driving...
UNC-Chapel
Hill has an impressive Latin American archival collection which ASU
students may use. A list of research institutions (other than UNC-Chapel
Hill) with substantial collections of Latin American resources can be
found at: http://www.lib.unc.edu/cdd/crs/international/latin/internet/collections.html
INTERNET
SITES
LANIC: Use the University of Texas LANIC site [http://www.lanic.utexas.edu/la/region/history/],
to find a number of useful sources that include book archival information,
texts of historic documents, etc. More history sites can be accessed through
LANIC's country links [http://www.lanic.utexas.edu/]
Digital
Librarian Latin American Resources
NMSU's Internet Resources for Latin America The
links in this guide compiled by Molly Molloy, librarian at the New Mexico
State University Library.
|