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.
Description: Over 50 primary source databases covering a wide variety of historical topics.
Format: Databases
Note: Selecting this link will bring you a filtered list of all AM content within the Database A-Z list.