JSTOR [Selected Articles in Full Text]This link opens in a new windowJSTOR offers multidisciplinary and discipline-specific collections in the humanities, sciences and social sciences. The moving wall represents the time period between the last issue available in JSTOR and the most recently published issue of a journal. It is specified by publishers in their license agreements with JSTOR, and generally ranges from 3 and 5 years. In calculating the moving wall, the current, incomplete year is not counted.
MLA International BibliographyThis link opens in a new windowIndex to journals, books, dictionaries, dissertations, and conference papers on literature, languages, folklore and linguistics. Includes critical writings on literature and human languages, including both naturallanguages and invented languages, e.g., Esperanto. Citations in a non-Roman alphabet are translated into the Roman alphabet.
Bibliography of English Women Writers (1500-1640)This link opens in a new windowThe Bibliography of English Women Writers 1500-1640 has evolved into a still-growing list of scholarship about 738 recovered writers and located texts, canonical and non-canonical. It identifies many hitherto unknown writers, including among them not only already familiar figures, but also women refugees such as the recusants, women in the colonies, Marrano women (Anusot), women translators, and English women writers in French, Greek, Latin, Spanish, Irish Gaelic, Scottish Gaelic and Welsh.
North American Women's Letters and Diaries [Selected Articles in Full Text]This link opens in a new windowIncludes the immediate experiences of some 200 women, as revealed in more than 28,000 pages of diaries and letters. Particular care has been taken to index this material so that it can be searched more thoroughly than ever before. When complete, the collection will include more than 150,000 pages of primary materials spanning more than 300 years. Each source has been carefully chosen using leading bibliographies. The collection also includes biographies and an extensive annotated bibliography of the sources in the database.
Orlando: Women's Writing in the British Isles from the Beginnings to the PresentThis link opens in a new windowOrlando: Women's Writing in the British Isles from the Beginnings to the Present includes biographical and writing career entries on British women writers, selected non-British or international women writers, and selected British and international men. Also includes dated items representing events and processes (in the accounts of these writers, but also in the areas of history, science, medicine, economics, the law, and other contexts).
Women and Social Movements in the United States, 1600-2000This link opens in a new windowWomen and Social Movements 1600-2000 contains several document projects and archives that interpret and present the history of women in social movements in the U.S. between 1600 and 2000. Content includes full text primary sources, a dictionary of social movements and organizations, a chronology of U.S. women's history, and book and web site reviews. This Scholar's Edition includes all content in the Basic Edition, with additional digital archives from the Commissions on the Status of Women and the biographical dictionary Notable American Women.
Works of Mary WollstonecraftThis link opens in a new windowThe Works of Mary Wollstonecraft Electronic Edition contains the full text of the seven volumes of The Works of Mary Wollstonecraft in a searchable and browsable interface.
Women's Travel Diaries (Duke)The diaries in this digital collection were written by British and American women who documented their travels to places around the globe, including India, the West Indies, countries in Europe, Africa, and the Middle East, as well as around the United States.
African American Women Writers of the 19th CenturyAfrican American Women Writers of the 19th Century is a digital collection of some 52 published works by 19th-century black women writers. A part of the Digital Schomburg, this collection provides access to the thought, perspectives and creative abilities of black women as captured in books and pamphlets published prior to 1920.
The Emory Women Writers Resource ProjectThe Emory Women Writers Resource Project is a collection of edited and unedited texts by women writing from the seventeenth century through the early twentieth century.