The most efficient way to find articles on a topic is to search a database - you can search across many journals at once.
Many history databases also search additional types of secondary literature - book reviews, book chapters, dissertations, etc.
Each database searches different sources; usually you'll want to search several databases.
If you are off campus you will be prompted for your Campus ID/password.
Many databases give you only a citation telling you where to find the article, not the article itself.
There's often a shortcut to the full article text in another database!
Click the Find It @GSU button to open a window with links to the article you need.
If that fails, try searching for the journal title in GIL-Find, or use Interlibrary Loan (ILL) to request it from another library.
Lost? Stuck? Too many options? Ask a Librarian for help!
For more databases, see related research guides or our A-Z database list.
A scholarly, multi-disciplinary database providing indexing and abstracts for thousands of journals and other publications. PDF content dates back to 1887.
Selecting this link will bring you a filtered list of all AM primary source content within the Database A-Z list. Previously: Adam Matthew Digital Collection
A cross-searchable database providing full-text access to recent and archived volumes of scholarly journals in all subject areas published by Cambridge University Press.
Formery History Reference Center. Covering topics in U.S. and world history from the earliest civilizations through the 21st century. Featuring the full text from leading history periodicals, reference books, encyclopedias, and nonfiction books.
A digital library of academic journals, books, and primary sources. It offers an interdisciplinary journal archive across the humanities, social sciences, and sciences
The Wiley Online Library hosts a multidisciplinary collection of online resources covering life, health and physical sciences, social science, and the humanities