Wal-Mart in My Neighborhood:
A Guide to Resources



Encyclopedias and other Reference Materials

For overviews of particular events, time periods, topics, and people in modern American history, there are many encyclopedias and reference works in Rolvaag Library. Make sure to check the article bibliographies for suggestions on useful secondary and primary materials.

How does my topic fit within the scope of American Economic history?
Great Events from History: Business and Commerce Series, 1897-1994. R.R. HC55.G68 1994
Historical Encyclopedia of American Labor R.R. HD8066.H57 2003
Business Leader Profiles R.R. HD38.25.U6B8 1999

How does my topic fit within the scope of American history generally?
Dictionary of American History R.R. E174.D62 2003
Encyclopedia of American Social History R.R. HN57.E58 1993

How does my topic fit within the scope of its times?
Timetables of American History [R.R. E18.5.U75]
American Chronicle: Six Decades in American Life, 1920-1980 [R.R. E169.1.G68 1987]
American Decades (in the 20th Century) R.R. E169.12419 1994 (in-depth articles)

What about particular aspects of my topic?
Atlas of the Baby Boom Generation R.R. E741.A88 2000
Encyclopedia of Urban America: The Cities and the Suburbs [R.R. HT123.E5 1998]
Encyclopedia of Rural America:
Racial and Ethnic Relations in America [R.R. E49.R33 2000]
Racial Justice in America [R.R. E185.M95 2003]

What was the government doing that affected my topic?
Congress and the Nation R.R. JK1051.C6
West's Encyclopedia of American Law R.R. KF154.W47 1998
Great American Court Cases R.R. KF385.A4G68 1999

What was the general public thinking about my topic?
The Gallop Poll R.R. HM261.G3
American Attitudes R.R. HN90.P8M58 1998

What was life like for the people involved with my topic?
Working Americans, 1880-1999 R.R. HD8066.D47 2000
The State of Working America R.R. HS8051.S73 [latest year]; 1991 to date in stacks

This is just a brief overview -- many, many more resources exist in the Reference area. Check with a reference librarian for ideas.



USING BRIDGE TO IDENTIFY SECONDARY SOURCES
Books, Videos, Music Recordings, etc.

Bridge will offer subject access to secondary materials on your topic, i.e. studies about your topic. Start with a keyword search and then follow the Library of Congress Subject Headings links. These are the topic labels which are used by most libraries across the United States (and often abroad) to describe your subject.
Headings for this course might include:

Stores, retail
Discount houses (Retail trade) -- [country]
Retail trade --[country]
Wal-Mart (Firm)
Competition -- [country]
Community development -- Economic aspects -- [country]
Consumption [Economics]
Materialism -- Social Aspects
Consumer behavior -- United States
Consumers' preferences
Popular culture -- Economic aspects
Labor -- United States
Working class -- United States
Strikes and Lockouts -- United States
Women -- Employment -- United States
Labor Movement -- United States -- Songs and music

If you have time to receive materials on interlibrary loan, World Cat (which includes the holdings of most academic libraries in Minnesota, the United States and some abroad) may be a good choice for searching. In the advanced search mode, us LCSH from above, limit to books and limit by date to construct a viable search. Also, for access to Minnesota State departmental libraries and state university libraries, use MnLink.


Using Databases to Identify Journal Articles and Reviews

For historians' studies on particular events and movements, look for journal articles, use journal indexes and databases. For US history, start with:

America: History and Life . Covers the scholarly literature on US and Canadian history.

For other scholarly perspectives:
CSA databases (can be searched individually or simultaneously):
PAIS is for public affairs/public policy articles
EconLit for economic perspectives
Sociological Abstracts for sociological studies

Academic Search Premier -- use peer-review/scholarly option



Primary Sources via the Catalog: Strategies

Via Library of Congress Subject Heading tags:
Sources, correspondence, personal narratives, reminiscences, interviews, case studies, pictorial works

Via Keywords:
document*, reading*, memoir*, autobiograph*, diary, diaries, letters, speeches, accounts

Via Date limits:
Subject or keyword search by relevant topic and then limit by publication date. Note: if things have been republished more recently you'll miss them.

Primary Sources in the Catalog: Neat stuff to have in hand
A Sample to Whet your Appetites


Primary Sources Collected in a volume:

The Depression and New Deal : a history in documents
Cesar Chavez : a brief biography with documents

Memoirs, oral histories, diaries, journals, personal accounts, interviews:
All the livelong day : the meaning and demeaning of routine work [interviews](1977)
Bridges of memory : Chicago's first wave of Black migration
Meatpackers : an oral history of Black packinghouse workers and their struggle for racial and economic equality

Government Documents [keyword or subject heading and limit to Govt Docs]:
Paycheck Fairness Act : report together with minority views (to accompany H.R. 1338) (including cost estimate of the Congressional Budget Office)

Statistics:
Historical Statistics of the United States [Also in print: R.R. HA202.H57 2006]

Public Opinion:
The Gallup Poll; public opinion, 1935-1977 [by] George H. Gallup

Gems of the times [keyword or subject heading and limit by date]:
The chain store problem: A critical analysis [1938]
The hometown advantage: How to defend your main street against chain stores and why it matters [2000]


Using Journal & Newspapers Indexes to find Primary Materials

To determine what is, or was, being read at the time on your topic, check indexes of popular materials covering the appropriate years. For instance:

Current magazines:
Business Source Premier
Academic Source Premier (use magazines tab)
Alternative Press Index -- on First Search; you'll need the password from a reference librarian
Regional Business News

Historical magazines:
Reader's Guide to Popular Literature . In print! R.R. AI3.R48 Indexes magazines back to 1890.
Business Periodicals Index R.R. HF5001.B9 Indexes back to 1958. (On 1st floor storage shelves)
PAIS Archive Public Affairs from 1915-1976 and PAIS1976 to date.
Alternative Press Index Available through First Search (You'll need the passwords from a reference librarian.)
Index to Periodical Articles by and about Negroes/Index to Black Periodicals R.R. AI3.O4

Newspapers:
ProQuest Newsstand Complete -- easiest to search
LexisNexis Academic -- includes Minneapolis Star Tribune
Westlaw Campus Research

Chicago Defender (1905-1975)
Los Angeles Times (1881 - 1986)
New York Amsterdam News (1922-1993)
New York Times (1851-2005)


PaperofRecord.com
[you'll have to set up an account to actually search; check newspaper list with this link to see if you're interested]
Google News Archives Advanced Search Totally hit or miss and often with fees. Try all of the above first!



Local Minnesota, Rice County and Northfield Resources

MnLink (as noted above) for access to library catalogs statewide, including various departments at the state level (Dept. of Natural Resources, etc.).
Northfield News
and Faribault Daily News -- indexes and microfilm copy available at the public libraries in appropriate city (for free). St. Olaf has the NN back to 1899 minus some years in the 1950s but no index. Faribault is the county seat so the FDN often includes coverage of issues relevant to Northfield. Public libraries may have clipping files as well.
Northfield Historical Society, Rice County Historical Society and the Minnesota Historical Society
Minnesota North Star -- official web site of the state of Minnesota
Rice County web site
Cannon Valley Watershed Project web site
Local contacts: Many people in Northfield were involved in the Target debate. Read the Northfield News, talk to your profs who have lived here awhile. You might be surprised!



Web Sites

The web is especially useful for collections of primary materials. There are a variety of ways to search the web but it might be useful to start with librarians' catalogs of web sites:

Infomine Web sites"collected" by academic librarians -- full descriptions and subject headings
Librarians' Index to the Internet Aimed more at public library patrons but still useful for many topics
Scout Report Reviews of web sites; searchable by keyword and Library of Congress Subject Headings
OAIster is an catalog of digital collections. You can choose text or image and search by keyword. It will tell you about the responsible party (authority).
Web of Knowledge/Web of Science Do a subject search on your topic. On the results page, in the upper right hand corner, click on "Scientific WebPlus, View web results."

Google -- Search google with your keywords AND add "digital collections" (with quotation marks) to your search. This phrase is used by authoritative sites so it will bring up useful items. This is a better strategy than using google images.


Remember to speak with a reference librarian about your specific topic for individualized assistance. We're always ready to brainstorm, suggest search strategies and language, and to help you on your way.