The American Council of Learned Societies (ACLS) Humanities E-Book Project is a collaboration of ten learned societies, 250 contributing publishers, and librarians at the University of Michigan Scholarly Publishing Office. The result is an online, fully searchable collection of more than 3,700 high-quality books in the humanities, recommended and reviewed by subject specialists and featuring unlimited multi-user access and free, downloadable MARC records. The Project is available 24/7 on- and off-campus through standard web browsers. The ACLS Humanities E-Book Project was initially funded by a grant from The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation. The collection adds about 300 new titles per year.
HarpWeek presents the full text of Harper's Weekly for the period 1857-1912. One of the leading news sources of the 19th century, Harper's contains writings of many American literary figures and many illustrations.
A listing of online journals from many publishers. There are freely accessible articles here, some of which limit their access to journal issues that are a year or more old.
Full text archive of over 1,200 core academic journals in most disciplines. Coverage starts with the first issue published and ends 3-5 years before the current year.
The world's most comprehensive bibliography, it contains the holdings information from most of the world's libraries: including books, manuscripts, archival collections, newspapers, journals, sound recordings, conference proceedings....
HathiTrust is a not-for-profit collaborative of academic and research libraries preserving 17+ million digitized items. HathiTrust offers reading access to the fullest extent allowable by U.S. copyright law,