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Area Studies Collections

INTRODUCTION

USING AREA STUDIES COLLECTIONS

CASE STUDIES: AMERICAN JEWISH WOMEN AND LATINAS
American Jewish Women
Latinas
arrow graphicUsing the Collections
Selected Collections

CONCLUSION

AREA STUDIES EXTERNAL SITES

VISIT/CONTACT

Using the Collections
see caption below

Columbus's Coat of Arms in the Hispanic Reading Room

The Hispanic Division, with its excellent staff of reference librarians and subject specialists, is the first stop for researchers interested in finding both primary and secondary sources concerning Latinas in English and in foreign languages. The division has a useful collection of general reference works in several languages. The staff can also advise new researchers about specialists in other divisions, some of whose materials will be described below.

Another cluster of sources can be found by accessing the Hispanic Division's Web site at <http://www.loc.gov/rr/hispanic>. There you can find links to many sites, including American Memory's

One unique source, The Handbook of Latin American Studies (HLAS), is produced in the Hispanic Division. Beginning in 1935, HLAS contains annotations of works in the humanities and the social sciences published in a variety of languages. Although its main focus is on Latin America, its annotations include material on migration to the United States, historical information from 1492 to the present, and comparisons between Latinas and populations still residing in the home country. Its database can be found at <http://lcweb2.loc.gov/hlas>.


SAMPLE LCSH: Hispanic American women; Cuban American women; Mexican American women; Puerto Rican women.

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