Webinars
Orientation for librarians and faculty
August 23, 2023
Virtual
Orientation for librarians and faculty
August 30, 2023
Virtual
Artstor on JSTOR
Artstor on JSTOR video tutorial
Artstor on JSTOR LibGuide
Check it outArtstor to JSTOR migration guide
Check it outWorking with JSTOR
How to use JSTOR LibGuide
Check it outJSTOR subjects and collections LibGuide
Check it outSearch help
Check it outWorkspace help
Check it outTeaching and learning with JSTOR
Global events contextualized
Security studies: A syllabus
Learn moreSecurity studies: Foundations and key concepts
Learn moreRussia and the Soviet Union: A syllabus
Learn moreUkraine, Russia, and the West: A background reading list
Learn moreSettlements and the Israel-Palestine conflict: Background reading
Learn moreGlobal food security: A primer
Learn moreThe global history of labor and race: Foundations and key concepts
Learn moreA short primer on the Panama Papers
Learn moreScience and society
Climate change: A syllabus
Learn moreA science reader for COVID-19
Learn moreA primer on e-DNA
Learn moreA primer on neutron stars
Learn moreTeaching pandemics syllabus
Learn moreThe history of reproductive rights: A syllabus
Learn morePolitics and power in America
Politics and power in the United States: A syllabus
Learn moreFake news: A media literacy reading list
Learn moreVoting in American politics: A syllabus
Learn moreJSTOR companion to the Schomburg Center’s Black Liberation Reading List
Learn moreMass incarceration: A syllabus
Learn moreThe history of hate in America reading list
Learn moreGuns in America: Foundations and key concepts
Learn moreImage credits: 1. Odra Noel. Adipose Tissue. Wellcome Collection. 2. Terracotta Female Figures. ca. 1400–1300 BCE. The Metropolitan Museum of Art. 3. Stereoscopic Viewer. ca. 1896. Gift of The Picture Place. 4. Christine Chagnoux. A Portrait of Grisou. Binghamton University Art Museum. 5. Kamisaka Sekka. All Kind of Things – Momo Chigusa – Reeds. Binghamton University Art Museum. 6. Barbara Brooks Morgan. Martha Graham – Lamentation. 1935, printed 1941. Binghamton University Art Museum. 7. Howard Hodgkin. Artist and Model (in Green and Yellow). 1980. Binghamton University Art Museum. 8. Scroll Cover with Birds and Flowers. 12th c. The Metropolitan Museum of Art. 9. Moriz Jung. Greyhound. 1912. The Metropolitan Museum of Art. 10. Possibly Leopoldo Franciolini. Basso. The Metropolitan Museum of Art. 11. Illustration: An NSA security posters from the 1950s or 60s via NSA. 12. An NSA security posters from the 1950s or 60s via Government Attic. 13. Russian President Vladimir Putin, left, and former Russian President Boris Yeltsin attend an inauguration ceremony for Putin May 7, 2000 in the Kremlin in Moscow via Getty. 14. People wait for trains on the platform at Kyiv train station on February 28, 2022 in Kyiv, Ukraine via Getty. 15. A view of part of the Jewish settlement of Maale Adumim on January 28, 2020 in Maale Adumim, West Bank via Lior Mizrahi/Getty. 16. Volunteers of the international NGO Kuwait Patients Helping Fund prepare a mixture for feeding malnourished children, as well as pregnant and lactating women, in Abu Shouk camp for Internally Displaced Persons (IDP), North Darfur via UN Photo/Albert González Farran. 17. Employees of Ottenheimer on strike for poor treatment via Flickr. 18. A conversation between Süddeutsche Zeitung and the anonymous source. 19. NASA. 20. Getty. 21. iStock. 22. Artist’s concept of the explosive collision of two neutron stars via Robin Dienel courtesy of the Carnegie Institution for Science. 23. A Red Cross nurse wearing a face mask, c. 1918 via Getty. 24. Unknown. 25. Pro-Trump supporters storm the U.S. Capitol following a rally with President Donald Trump on January 6, 2021 in Washington, DC via Getty. 26. Via Getty. 27. Via Getty. 28. The 135th Street branch of the New York Public Library via Wikimedia Commons. 29. Convicts working at Reed Camp, South Carolina, 1934 via Wikimedia Commons. 30. A spectrogram of the white supremacist rally in Charlottesville, VA resembles a distorted American flag; credit: Catherine Halley. 31. Via Flickr.