This document provides a bibliography of resources for researching alternative and underground media, including dictionaries, directories, bibliographies and indexes, as well as secondary sources. It lists reference works such as dictionaries of media and communications, as well as directories that index alternative newspapers and zines. The bibliography also outlines several books that provide historical overviews and analyses of alternative media like underground newspapers and zines.
Canvas of English literature is very large to be able to
summarize in some words. Thus, writing an English
dissertation is a big task, such as being handled by
students.
Is anyone looking for someone who can help you with
your English dissertation?
Do you want a professional to write your English
dissertation?
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discuss the reasons why you want to write English
dissertation offer writing help.
•Use the general topic suggestion to form the thesis statement.docxbudbarber38650
•Use the general topic suggestion to form the
thesis statement
which will be an opinion on the topic. The thesis must have
three
controlling ideas.
•Develop an essay
map or informal outline
•Develop each paragraph using a specific
topic sentence
related to the controls in your thesis; thus, announcing the subject matter of that paragraph.
•Use
transitional devices
throughout the essay and in each paragraph.
•Use any combination of modes to support your arguments.
• Have a well-developed introduction and conclusion.
•Use quotes from the text to support your arguments.
•You must have a title.
•Make a “Work Cited” page with the text as the only source.
Topic:
Reading helps students to develop skills that will make them into a more optimally rounded person. Choose any three skills learned in reading and discuss how each one can help students to be more academically inclined.
the text
“The 1960s: A Decade of Promise and Heartbreak”
By Kenneth T. Walsh
March 9, 2010
US News
It was a decade of extremes, of
transformational
change and
bizarre
contrasts: flower children and
assassins
,
idealism
and
alienation
, rebellion and
backlash
. For many in the
massive
post-World War II baby boom generation, it was both the best of times and the worst of times. (7 words)
There will be many 50-year anniversaries to mark significant events of the 1960s, and a big reason is that what happened in that remarkable era still
resonates
today. At the dawn of that decade of contrasts a half century ago—on Jan. 2 ,1960—a
charismatic
young senator from Massachusetts named John F. Kennedy announced that he was running for president, and he won the nation's highest office the following November. He remains one of the
iconic
figures in U.S. history. On February 1, four determined black men sat at a whites-only lunch counter at a Woolworth's in Greensboro, N.C., and were denied service. Their act of
defiance
triggered a wave of sit-ins for civil rights across the South and brought
unrelenting
national attention to America's original sin of racism. On March 3, Elvis Presley returned to the United States from his Army stint in Germany, resuming his career as a pioneer of rock-and-roll and an icon of the youth culture celebrating freedom and a growing sense of rebellion.(5 words)
By the end of the decade, Kennedy had been
assassinated
, along with his brother Robert and the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. America's cities had become powder kegs as African-Americans, despite historic gains toward legal equality, became more impatient than ever at being second-class citizens. Women began demanding their rights in
unprecedented
numbers. Young people and their parents felt a widening generation gap as seen in their differing perceptions of
patriotism
, drug use, sexuality, and the work ethic. The now familiar culture wars between liberals and conservatives caused angry divisions over law and order, busing, racial preferences, abortion, the Vie.
Putting History on the Map with Calisphere - CCSS 2011sherriberger
Presented at the California Council for the Social Studies annual conference March 4, 2011. Presented by Sherri Berger, California Digital Library, and Letty Kraus, UC Davis History Project.
Question:
◦ Were
the
experiences
of
male
and
female
slaves
similar
or
different
in
the
nineteenth-‐century
South?
Reading:
1)
Narrative
of
the
Life
of
Frederick
Douglass
2)
Deborah
Gray
White,
Arn’t
I
a
Woman
3)
Any
pertinent
documents
from
textbook
and
document
collection
Requirements:
1) Papers
must
be
at
least
1,000
words
long
2) Footnotes
are
required
3) Bibliography
is
required
4) Please
number
pages
5) Please
include
a
title
page
Turabian Style - Sample Footnotes and
Bibliographic Entries (6th edition)
Turabian documentation format uses Footnotes or Endnotes and a Bibliography.
Footnotes: In the text, the note reference follows the passage to which it refers and is
marked with an arabic numeral typed slightly above the line (superscript). Notes are
arranged numerically at the foot (Footnotes) of the page. Notes include complete
bibliographic information when cited for the first time.
Bibliography: Lists only sources used in writing the paper. Entries are arranged
alphabetically by author's surname and include complete bibliographic information.
See the following examples for more information. Note the difference in form and
punctuation.
Type of
entry Footnote Entry Form Bibliography Form
Book, one
author
Daniel A. Weiss, Oedipus in Not-
tingham: D.H. Lawrence (Seattle:
Univer- sity of Washington Press,
1962), 62.
Weiss, Daniel A. Oedipus in Nottingham: D.H.
Lawrence. Seattle: University of Washington
Press, 1962.
Book, two
authors
Walter E. Houghton and G. Robert
Strange, Victorian Poetry and Poetics
(Cambridge: Harvard University
Press, 1959), 27
Houghton, Walter E., and G. Robert Strange.
Victorian Poetry and Poetics. Cam- bridge:
Harvard University Press, 1959.
Book, 3+
authors / Book
in a series
Jaroslav Pelikan and others, Reli-
gion and the University, York Univer-
sity Invitation Lecture Series
(Toronto: University of Toronto
Press, 1964), 109.
Pelikan, Jaroslav, M.G. Ross, W.G. Pollard,
M.N. Eisendrath, C. Moeller, and A. Wittenberg.
Religion and the Uni- versity. York University
Invitation Lecture Series. Toronto: University of
Toronto Press, 1964.
Book, no author
given
New Life Options: The Working
Women's Resource Book (New York:
McGraw- Hill, 1976), 42.
New Life Options: The Working Women's Re-
source Book. New York: McGraw-Hill, 1976.
Institution,
association, or
the like, as
"author"
American Library Association, ALA
Handbook of Organization and
1995/1996 Membership Directory
(Chicago: American Library
Association, 1995), MD586.
American Library Association. ALA Handbook
of Organization and 1995/1996 Member- ship
Directory. Chicago: American Library
Association, 1995.
Edito.
The Life of an Idea The Significance of Frederick JacksoMoseStaton39
The Life of an Idea: The Significance of Frederick Jackson Turner's Frontier Thesis
Author(s): Martin Ridge
Source: Montana: The Magazine of Western History, Vol. 41, No. 1 (Winter, 1991), pp. 2-13
Published by: Montana Historical Society
Stable URL: http://www.jstor.org/stable/4519357
Accessed: 23-10-2017 05:18 UTC
JSTOR is a not-for-profit service that helps scholars, researchers, and students discover, use, and build upon a wide
range of content in a trusted digital archive. We use information technology and tools to increase productivity and
facilitate new forms of scholarship. For more information about JSTOR, please contact [email protected]
Your use of the JSTOR archive indicates your acceptance of the Terms & Conditions of Use, available at
http://about.jstor.org/terms
Montana Historical Society is collaborating with JSTOR to digitize, preserve and extend
access to Montana: The Magazine of Western History
This content downloaded from 192.149.109.224 on Mon, 23 Oct 2017 05:18:47 UTC
All use subject to http://about.jstor.org/terms
The Life
Frederick Jackson Turner, (aJlson, VIis.
in his office in the
Political Sciencrie and History. about 1892
AU^.. <^^^J
/^fe^ ,- 9 2y-< _ -
F J Tn 0y \Z
I , +f t<R,< \ X I 2~ -, . I______________________\
This content downloaded from 192.149.109.224 on Mon, 23 Oct 2017 05:18:47 UTC
All use subject to http://about.jstor.org/terms
of an Idea
The Significance of Frederick
Jackson Turner's Frontier Thesis
by Martin Ridge
One of the favorite discussion topics among
American historians is the question: what piece
of American historical writing has been most
influential in American life? Although the
subject seems almost trivial, given serious
thought it is a challenge. There are, after all,
only a handful of historians whose work has
reached beyond the "Halls of Ivy" and even
fewer who seem to have had an impact on
American culture. Such a group would include
Charles A. Beard, Alfred Chandler, Oscar
Handlin, Richard Hofstadter, Perry Miller,
Samuel Eliot Morison, Francis Parkman,
Arthur Schlesinger, Frederick Jackson
Turner, and C. Vann Woodward, to name only
the more prominent.
From the works of these authors, Frederick
Jackson Turner's brief essay, "The Signifi-
cance of the Frontier in American History," is
the most logical choice for the most influential
piece of historical writing. Turner's essay oc-
cupies a unique place in American history as
well as in American historiography.1 There is
a valid reason for this. It, more than any other
piece of historical scholarship, most affected
the American's self and institutional percep-
tions. "The Significance of the Frontier in
American History" is, in fact, a masterpiece.
A masterpiece is not merely an outstanding
work or something that identifies its creator
as a master craftsman in the field. A master-
piece should change the way a public sees,
feels, or thinks about reality. It should ...
More Related Content
Similar to Bibliography: Zines & Alternative Press
Canvas of English literature is very large to be able to
summarize in some words. Thus, writing an English
dissertation is a big task, such as being handled by
students.
Is anyone looking for someone who can help you with
your English dissertation?
Do you want a professional to write your English
dissertation?
Then rent our services now. Our professional dissertation
editors are skilled at writing English dissertation. Let's
discuss the reasons why you want to write English
dissertation offer writing help.
•Use the general topic suggestion to form the thesis statement.docxbudbarber38650
•Use the general topic suggestion to form the
thesis statement
which will be an opinion on the topic. The thesis must have
three
controlling ideas.
•Develop an essay
map or informal outline
•Develop each paragraph using a specific
topic sentence
related to the controls in your thesis; thus, announcing the subject matter of that paragraph.
•Use
transitional devices
throughout the essay and in each paragraph.
•Use any combination of modes to support your arguments.
• Have a well-developed introduction and conclusion.
•Use quotes from the text to support your arguments.
•You must have a title.
•Make a “Work Cited” page with the text as the only source.
Topic:
Reading helps students to develop skills that will make them into a more optimally rounded person. Choose any three skills learned in reading and discuss how each one can help students to be more academically inclined.
the text
“The 1960s: A Decade of Promise and Heartbreak”
By Kenneth T. Walsh
March 9, 2010
US News
It was a decade of extremes, of
transformational
change and
bizarre
contrasts: flower children and
assassins
,
idealism
and
alienation
, rebellion and
backlash
. For many in the
massive
post-World War II baby boom generation, it was both the best of times and the worst of times. (7 words)
There will be many 50-year anniversaries to mark significant events of the 1960s, and a big reason is that what happened in that remarkable era still
resonates
today. At the dawn of that decade of contrasts a half century ago—on Jan. 2 ,1960—a
charismatic
young senator from Massachusetts named John F. Kennedy announced that he was running for president, and he won the nation's highest office the following November. He remains one of the
iconic
figures in U.S. history. On February 1, four determined black men sat at a whites-only lunch counter at a Woolworth's in Greensboro, N.C., and were denied service. Their act of
defiance
triggered a wave of sit-ins for civil rights across the South and brought
unrelenting
national attention to America's original sin of racism. On March 3, Elvis Presley returned to the United States from his Army stint in Germany, resuming his career as a pioneer of rock-and-roll and an icon of the youth culture celebrating freedom and a growing sense of rebellion.(5 words)
By the end of the decade, Kennedy had been
assassinated
, along with his brother Robert and the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. America's cities had become powder kegs as African-Americans, despite historic gains toward legal equality, became more impatient than ever at being second-class citizens. Women began demanding their rights in
unprecedented
numbers. Young people and their parents felt a widening generation gap as seen in their differing perceptions of
patriotism
, drug use, sexuality, and the work ethic. The now familiar culture wars between liberals and conservatives caused angry divisions over law and order, busing, racial preferences, abortion, the Vie.
Putting History on the Map with Calisphere - CCSS 2011sherriberger
Presented at the California Council for the Social Studies annual conference March 4, 2011. Presented by Sherri Berger, California Digital Library, and Letty Kraus, UC Davis History Project.
Question:
◦ Were
the
experiences
of
male
and
female
slaves
similar
or
different
in
the
nineteenth-‐century
South?
Reading:
1)
Narrative
of
the
Life
of
Frederick
Douglass
2)
Deborah
Gray
White,
Arn’t
I
a
Woman
3)
Any
pertinent
documents
from
textbook
and
document
collection
Requirements:
1) Papers
must
be
at
least
1,000
words
long
2) Footnotes
are
required
3) Bibliography
is
required
4) Please
number
pages
5) Please
include
a
title
page
Turabian Style - Sample Footnotes and
Bibliographic Entries (6th edition)
Turabian documentation format uses Footnotes or Endnotes and a Bibliography.
Footnotes: In the text, the note reference follows the passage to which it refers and is
marked with an arabic numeral typed slightly above the line (superscript). Notes are
arranged numerically at the foot (Footnotes) of the page. Notes include complete
bibliographic information when cited for the first time.
Bibliography: Lists only sources used in writing the paper. Entries are arranged
alphabetically by author's surname and include complete bibliographic information.
See the following examples for more information. Note the difference in form and
punctuation.
Type of
entry Footnote Entry Form Bibliography Form
Book, one
author
Daniel A. Weiss, Oedipus in Not-
tingham: D.H. Lawrence (Seattle:
Univer- sity of Washington Press,
1962), 62.
Weiss, Daniel A. Oedipus in Nottingham: D.H.
Lawrence. Seattle: University of Washington
Press, 1962.
Book, two
authors
Walter E. Houghton and G. Robert
Strange, Victorian Poetry and Poetics
(Cambridge: Harvard University
Press, 1959), 27
Houghton, Walter E., and G. Robert Strange.
Victorian Poetry and Poetics. Cam- bridge:
Harvard University Press, 1959.
Book, 3+
authors / Book
in a series
Jaroslav Pelikan and others, Reli-
gion and the University, York Univer-
sity Invitation Lecture Series
(Toronto: University of Toronto
Press, 1964), 109.
Pelikan, Jaroslav, M.G. Ross, W.G. Pollard,
M.N. Eisendrath, C. Moeller, and A. Wittenberg.
Religion and the Uni- versity. York University
Invitation Lecture Series. Toronto: University of
Toronto Press, 1964.
Book, no author
given
New Life Options: The Working
Women's Resource Book (New York:
McGraw- Hill, 1976), 42.
New Life Options: The Working Women's Re-
source Book. New York: McGraw-Hill, 1976.
Institution,
association, or
the like, as
"author"
American Library Association, ALA
Handbook of Organization and
1995/1996 Membership Directory
(Chicago: American Library
Association, 1995), MD586.
American Library Association. ALA Handbook
of Organization and 1995/1996 Member- ship
Directory. Chicago: American Library
Association, 1995.
Edito.
The Life of an Idea The Significance of Frederick JacksoMoseStaton39
The Life of an Idea: The Significance of Frederick Jackson Turner's Frontier Thesis
Author(s): Martin Ridge
Source: Montana: The Magazine of Western History, Vol. 41, No. 1 (Winter, 1991), pp. 2-13
Published by: Montana Historical Society
Stable URL: http://www.jstor.org/stable/4519357
Accessed: 23-10-2017 05:18 UTC
JSTOR is a not-for-profit service that helps scholars, researchers, and students discover, use, and build upon a wide
range of content in a trusted digital archive. We use information technology and tools to increase productivity and
facilitate new forms of scholarship. For more information about JSTOR, please contact [email protected]
Your use of the JSTOR archive indicates your acceptance of the Terms & Conditions of Use, available at
http://about.jstor.org/terms
Montana Historical Society is collaborating with JSTOR to digitize, preserve and extend
access to Montana: The Magazine of Western History
This content downloaded from 192.149.109.224 on Mon, 23 Oct 2017 05:18:47 UTC
All use subject to http://about.jstor.org/terms
The Life
Frederick Jackson Turner, (aJlson, VIis.
in his office in the
Political Sciencrie and History. about 1892
AU^.. <^^^J
/^fe^ ,- 9 2y-< _ -
F J Tn 0y \Z
I , +f t<R,< \ X I 2~ -, . I______________________\
This content downloaded from 192.149.109.224 on Mon, 23 Oct 2017 05:18:47 UTC
All use subject to http://about.jstor.org/terms
of an Idea
The Significance of Frederick
Jackson Turner's Frontier Thesis
by Martin Ridge
One of the favorite discussion topics among
American historians is the question: what piece
of American historical writing has been most
influential in American life? Although the
subject seems almost trivial, given serious
thought it is a challenge. There are, after all,
only a handful of historians whose work has
reached beyond the "Halls of Ivy" and even
fewer who seem to have had an impact on
American culture. Such a group would include
Charles A. Beard, Alfred Chandler, Oscar
Handlin, Richard Hofstadter, Perry Miller,
Samuel Eliot Morison, Francis Parkman,
Arthur Schlesinger, Frederick Jackson
Turner, and C. Vann Woodward, to name only
the more prominent.
From the works of these authors, Frederick
Jackson Turner's brief essay, "The Signifi-
cance of the Frontier in American History," is
the most logical choice for the most influential
piece of historical writing. Turner's essay oc-
cupies a unique place in American history as
well as in American historiography.1 There is
a valid reason for this. It, more than any other
piece of historical scholarship, most affected
the American's self and institutional percep-
tions. "The Significance of the Frontier in
American History" is, in fact, a masterpiece.
A masterpiece is not merely an outstanding
work or something that identifies its creator
as a master craftsman in the field. A master-
piece should change the way a public sees,
feels, or thinks about reality. It should ...
Similar to Bibliography: Zines & Alternative Press (20)
The Life of an Idea The Significance of Frederick Jackso
Bibliography: Zines & Alternative Press
1. Sara Grozanick
LIS 620 | Advanced Reference
Final Project
BIBLIOGRAPHY
Dictionaries
Danesi, M. (2009). Dictionary of media and communications. Armonk, N.Y.:
M.E. Sharpe.
Weiner, R. (1990). Webster's New World dictionary of media and
communications. New York: Webster's New World.
Directories, bibliographies + indexes
[electronic + print]
Directory of Periodicals Alternative Press Centre
http://www.altpress.org/mod/apc_directory/index.php
Directory of alternative press titles, browsable by category (e.g., atheism, body and body
image, Canada) or alphabetically. Title records include publisher, circulation information,
contact information, website, price, ISSN, review citations, and readership descriptions.
AltPressIndex (1991-current)
An online proprietary database of the print resource Alternative Press Index.
California State University, Sacramento, & Liberty, J. (1975). Journals of
dissent and social change A bibliography of titles in the California State
University, Sacramento, Library. Sacramento: The Library.
A good place to find titles for pre-1960s underground newspapers and alternative press sources
that are not cataloged under the LCSH Underground press publications.
Georgakas, D. (1978). Left face: A source book of radical magazines,
presses, and collectives actively involved in the arts. New York: Cineaste.
Whitaker, C. S. (1990). Alternative publications: A guide to directories,
indexes, bibliographies, and other sources. Jefferson, N.C.: McFarland.
ZineWiki
http://zinewiki.com/
Contains alphabetical directory of zines by title in the Quick Links section.
2. Secondary Sources
Atton, C. (2002). Alternative media. London: Sage Publications.
A contemporary study of alternative media, focusing on the US and UK, that encompasses the
breadth of alternative publications (from zines to webpages) and the historical, cultural, and
poltical contexts in which it is produced.
Bronson, A., Aarons, P., & Gartenfeld, A. (2008). Queer Zines. New York:
Printed Matter.
"[T]he first historical survey of serial, independent publications with a queer sensibility. [Queer
Zines] describes the trajectory of queer zine publishing from the early 70s to today [...]."
http://queerzines.com/
Conlin, J. (Ed.) (1974). The American Radical Press, 1880-1960. Westport,
CT: Greenwood Press.
A two-volume collection of historical essays on various radical periodicals published during the
period of 1880 to 1960.
Coyer, K., Dowmunt, T., & Fountain, A. (2007). The alternative media
handbook. London: Routledge.
An excellent survey of alternative media tracing its origins from alternative radio to radical
journalism and the Web.
Duncombe, S. (1997). Notes from Underground: Zines and the politics of
alternative culture. London: Verso.
A history that traces the origin of zines and analyses the role of zines within alternative
culture.
Kessler, L. (1984). The dissident press: Alternative journalism in American
history. Beverly Hills, CA: Sage Publications.
A chronological survey of the history of the underground press in the US from the pre-Civil War
period to the Vietnam War.
Spencer, A. (2005). DIY: The rise of lo-fi culture. London; New York: Marion
Boyars.
An introductory examination of the modern (mid-20th century to present) DIY movement
of self-produced records, CDs--and zines--within the alternative culture of the US and UK by a
former zinester and record-label founder.
Streitmatter, R. (2001). Voices of revolution: The dissident press in
America. New York: Columbia UP.
A an overview of the underground press, retracing some of the territory of Kessler's work, but
also including coverage of the gay press and birth control publications.