Use the Journals tab on the GSU Library homepage to search for historical periodical holdings.
Keep the "All Journals" button selected. This will tell you if we have the journal in paper or in microfilm.
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WorldCat is a database that searches libraries worldwide, including books, audiovisual materials, periodicals (magazines and newspapers), and archival materials. You can request many of the items in WorldCat using Interlibrary Loan.
Use Advanced Search to limit searches by author, title, and/or format.
If you are looking for periodicals, look for records including the word "microform" or "microfilm." Most libraries will not lend out bound copies of periodicals, but many will lend microfilm versions.
When requesting microform copies through Interlibrary Loan, use the "Other (Free Text)" request option and include periodical title, dates needed, and note that you are requesting microfilm.
(Newspaper collections are listed separately in the Historical Newspapers guide)
You will need to log in with your Campus ID and password to use these databases off-campus.
This database contains digitized content from periodicals published during the colonial period to the early 20th century, chronicling the development of America.
A digital library of academic journals, books, and primary sources. It offers an interdisciplinary journal archive across the humanities, social sciences, and sciences
Rock and Roll, Counterculture, Peace and Protest: Popular Culture explores the dynamic period of social, political and cultural change between 1950 and 1975, offering thousands of color images of manuscript and rare printed material as well as photographs, ephemera and memorabilia from this exciting period in our recent history
Periodicals - magazines, journals, and newspapers - written during the time period under study are excellent primary sources.
Identify useful periodicals for your topic:
Search library catalogs for periodical titles to locate print, microfilm or online copies.
For journal holdings in GIL, use the Journals tab on the homepage, or, in Classic GIL, the Exact Journal Title search.
To find individual articles use an index. Or, search a fulltext database that contains your periodical.
Sometimes, historians use newpapers or magazines that don't have an index and aren't available online. In this case, begin by browsing key dates.
Identify periodical titles
American Periodicals 1741-1900 - lists periodicals available in the American Periodcals series database;
Z6951 .H65 (click "Get It" to find full list of where to find this volume in the library)
African-American Newspapers and Periodicals
Ref. Z6944.N39 A37 1998
Hispanic Periodicals in the United States, Origins to 1960
PN4885.S75 K36 1999
Find more bibliographies by including the words periodicals (or newspapers) and bibliography as subject terms in your search.