Where to go for research

Sat, Aug 7 2010 12:12pm IST 1
Erebus
Erebus
46 Posts
Just wondering where people go to do research.

Libraries? Internet? Any specific sites?
Sat, Aug 7 2010 12:19pm IST 2
stephenterry
stephenterry
1697 Posts
Internet and life experiences
Sat, Aug 7 2010 12:34pm IST 3
Erebus
Erebus
46 Posts
Any particular sites you use? Or does is it just dependant on the topic being researched?
Sun, Aug 8 2010 04:09am IST 4
stephenterry
stephenterry
1697 Posts
I Google - which is a bit hit and miss - and then plough through likely candidates on the topic being researched. Warning: it is tedious...
...But if you want to know what blood smells like at every stage of decomposition, or recipes for human flesh, or 22 ways to kill...
stephen
Sun, Aug 8 2010 09:25am IST 5
whimsical rabbit
whimsical rabbit
1 Posts
Oooh, my first post. So exciting!

Okay, most of the times I just google or visit wikipedia if it's information on a place or something. From time to time I use yahoo answers, and if I get something that looks like a reliable answer, I go for it. I've also been visiting the British Library but unfortunately I'm not that close to London to do it anymore- nonetheless any library with a decent archive would do. I was looking for a New York travel guide of the 80s and even national geographic could not provide me one; the BL could. Finally, I look for people to interview, either on a face-to-face meeting or via email or skype or whatever.



Sun, Aug 8 2010 09:39am IST 6
mike
mike
631 Posts
It depends upon what sort of information you want. For example The 'Dictionary of National biography' provides more information than the same page on 'Wiki' - though occasionally the person who has done the 'DNB' entry has done the 'Wik' entry too. A local library service will provide some extra sources including 'the DNB but this also depends on which country - and county -you live in.
But the best sources of information are still books. i am reading Richard Holmes's biography of Shelley at the moment and i am confident in his opinions. If you look at the 'Wiki' entry on Shelley, there is the suggestion that his death had been a political assassination. i would have thought this most unlikely as he was not so well known in his own lifetime. Miranda Richardson, in her biography of Mary Shelley, suggests his boat might have been rammed due to some local arguments. The usual opinion had been that Shelley and Williams, his crew mate, had been bad sailors and could not cope with a sudden storm owing to having added to much top sail to the mast. Who really knows? Who do you believe over all these opinions? (I would go for Richard Holmes!)
Reference libraries seem to be closing down which is a shame as gun catalogues and histories of firearms, would be on the shelves and medical books about decomposition too!

Sun, Aug 8 2010 10:56am IST 7
EmmaD
EmmaD
1801 Posts
Google - you get better at putting in the right search terms to sift out what you want. Google Scholar is useful too - sifts out the gazillion sites which just repeat the same tired stuff you knew anyway.

I agree that you have to go very, very carefully with Wikipedia, although the links at the bottom of the page are a goldmine, and it's perfectly good for straightforward facts that no one would dispute: if it had got the date of the dissolution of the Batavian Republic wrong, someone would have corrected it.

I use Google Image/Maps/Streetview a lot. How else are you going to work out if she can... when they are... no, that was in the erotic short story I'm not allowed to own up to, so I can't tell you or I'd have to kill you. But Google Image found the Smithsonian site for me, and answered my question.

I'm lucky in teaching for the Open University, as they have the most fantastic electronic library, which gives access not only to things like the full new DNB and OED, but also JSTOR and the other scholarly archives. I'm in mourning for the goldmine that was Deb's Historical Research Page, as that seems to have vanished. (Moral, if you like and use a site, don't keep putting off clicking the 'donate now' button...)

But books still win. I'm shameless about actually buying them, because you never know when they'll save your life at 10.30 one night two novels from now. And browsing them always brings up things you wouldn't have known to Google for.

I've ordered British Library books through my local public library, though inter-library loan of all sorts does take forever. It's a huge help to be able to search catalogues online, though. The British Library I find next-to-useless, what with not being able to borrow the books (no use to a single parent with school-aged children), and having to order them (how can you be sure they're what you want?) and not being able to browse the shelves when as so often you don't know what you want... So I belong to the London Library, which was founded in something like 1865, precisely by and for people who are driven nuts by the BL. http://www.londonlibrary.co.uk/index.htm. Their electronic library also gives you access to lots of things, and you can even run a postal account, if you don't live in London and get books posted to and fro. And these days they have a coffee machine...
Wed, Aug 18 2010 12:35pm IST 8
mike
mike
631 Posts
'COPAC' does list holding libraries and it is quite useful in finding out where old and rare books might be found, though the university library that holds the book might not allow you access.

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