New e-book collection: Project MUSE Global Cultural Studies

The library has recently acquired new e-book collection:
Project MUSE Global Cultural Studies
This collection of e-books contains 245 titles on American studies, ethnic studies (including Asian, Latin American, African-American, and indigenous studies), women’s and gender studies, disability studies, and other works that fall within the rubric of contemporary cultural studies.
The e-book collection includes such titles as:
After Apartheid: Reinventing South Africa? A band of noble women: Racial politics in the women's peace movement The Internet of elsewhere: The emergent effects of a wired world
Seeing drugs: Modernization, counterinsurgency, and U.S. narcotics control in the third world, 1969-1976 User unfriendly: Consumer struggles with personal technologies, from clocks and sewing machines to cars and computers Who deserves to die? Constructing the executable subject
Interested in what else is available? Check out Project MUSE Global Cultural Studies today!
Have a question about this (or any other) e-book collection? Leave a comment or ask a librarian!

Women’s History Month: Women’s Education – Women’s Empowerment

In the United States, the month of March marks Women’s History Month. (And today, March 8, is International Women’s Day!) This year’s theme is “Women’s Education — Women’s Empowerment” and the Library would like to highlight some of the material we own on the topic:

Books

Gender and higher education Professor mommy : finding work-family balance in academia The science on women in science
(Want more books? Search in the catalog for women and education.)

E-Books

Education and women in the early modern Hispanic world Call her a citizen : progressive-era activist and educator Anna Pennybacker Girls' education in the 21st century : equality, empowerment, and growth
(Want more books? Search in the catalog for women and education.)

Databases

Women and Social Movements in the United States, 1600-2000
Women and Social Movements in the United States, 1600-2000

Learn about the history of women in social movements in the U.S. between 1600 and 2000. This database includes many primary resources, support materials, chronology, and teaching tools.

Websites

Women’s History Month (Library of Congress)
WIG: Women, Internationalisms, and Gender (Binghamton University)
Women’s History Sourcebook (Fordham University)
Women Working (Harvard University)
Aletta: Institute for Women’s History (includes extensive list of websites on women)
National Women’s History Project
Essential Texts in Feminist Theory & Feminist Thought (NYPL Blogs)
Women’s Leadership in American History (CUNY)

Have a question about something listed above? Want to share your own favorite resources for women’s studies? Leave a comment or ask a librarian!