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Anthropology: Home

A guide for research in Anthropology, Archaeology, and related areas

About this research guide

Welcome! This guide is an introduction to library resources specific to Anthropology, Archaeology, and related fields.

If you need help getting started with your research please reach out to a subject librarian. We're available to meet in-person on campus or via Zoom.

Please bear in mind that this guide is intended to help get you started, and is not meant to be exhaustive. 

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Research Tips and Strategies

  • When keyword searching, use key words that best describe your topic.  The objective is to get a small group of relevant records.  People, places themes, characters, time periods, events, types of information (i.e. ethnography) issues and more can be key words.  What words or phrases best describe your topic?
  • For locating primary source material, consider these “subject keywords”: sources, documents, personal narrative, documentary history, archives, manuscripts, correspondence, speech*, oration, statistics, cartoon*, interview*, oral history*.
  • Evaluate your search results.  Click on the title to view the entire record, including chapters and subject headings.  If you don’t see related materials in the top 10-20 items of your search results, reconstruct your search using alternative keywords, synonyms, narrower terms, more terms, etc.  
  • Note the citation/source information (journal title, volume #, issue #, and date) before leaving the database, even if you just to go to another window.  The citation is the most important information in the database record and is required to locate the article text, online or in print.
  • Raid bibliographies.  Books and articles have bibliographies and references.  Use them so you don’t have to spend hours searching databases.
  • In the library, like materials are shelved together.  When looking for a particular book on the shelf, also scope out what’s shelved next to it.  Books and back issues of periodicals are interfiled on the shelves in call number order.
  • Consult a librarian. We work across the disciplines and will refer you if necessary.  Librarians can help track down sources, explain library services, interpret citations, and suggest the most useful keywords.  The Ask a Librarian service provides 24/7 access to a librarian.

Research & Engagement Librarian

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Anne Cong-Huyen
she/her/hers
Contact:
annech@ucsb.edu
(805) 893-8067
Website

Library Award for Undergraduate Research

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The annual UCSB Library Award for Undergraduate Research (LAUR) recognizes students who produce a scholarly or creative work that makes expert and sophisticated use of the collections, resources, and services of the UCSB Library.

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