HIST 4893: Race in American History

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Searching Concepts

Most of us just start typing when we encounter a search box. However, understanding the differences between

keywords - words anywhere in a record or text and

subject headings or descriptors - phrases assigned to a catalog record by a human being who has assessed the content

can help you to focus or to expand your search. Using subject headings will pull together related records with terminology you may have not considered in your keyword search.

Below are some examples of keyword searches and related subject headings.

Keywords
Subject Headings
race in america

race relations--united states--history
racism--southern states--history
minorities--united states--history

civil rights movement

african americans--civil rights--history
race relations--southern states--history
school integration--arkansas
civil rights movements--mississippi--20th century

chinese immigrants in the west

chinese americans--history
china--emigration and immigration
chinese--california--history

native american schools

indians of north america--education--history
cherokee indians--education
off-reservation boarding schools
indians of north america--government relations

Standard Subdivisions

The Library of Congress Subject Headings use standard subdivisions under place names (countries, states, counties, cities, and other geographic divisions) to classify works. These are some of our favorites for history, most can be further subdivided by time period:

Subject TermsUsed For
--history

Any work of history.

Can be divided by time period; each place has its own unique set of time period divisions. Example:

arkansas--history--19th century
arkansas -- history -- civil war, 1861-1865
arkansas--history--1865-
arkansas--history--20th century
arkansas--history--to 1950

Catalogers will assign the most specific time period that applies to the entire work.

--civilization

cultural studies and characteristics

--economic conditions

trade and business, income and distribution of wealth

--foreign relations

diplomatic relations between countries or regions

--intellectual life

literature, philosophy, political thought, public discourse

--personal narratives*

first-hand accounts of historical events

--politics and government

elections, campaigns, parties, legislative process

--social conditions

poverty or affluence, housing, labor, educational attainment, social classes

--social life and customs

folkways, popular culture

--sources*

collections of original source documents