E-resources and databases
starting with "E"
- e-Korean Studies
A multidisciplinary full text database of books; journals; newspapers; dissertations, and research reports.
- Early Encounters In North America
A full text and indexed collection consisting of primary sources documenting the relationships of peoples in North America from 1534 to 1850. Coverage includes exploration, discovery, travel, people, culture and the environment. Source documents include: letters, diaries, memoirs, images and accounts of early encounters.
- Early English Books Online
Early English Books Online (EEBO) features page images of almost every work printed in the British Isles and North America, as well as works in English printed elsewhere from 1470-1700. Over 200 libraries worldwide have contributed to EEBO. From the first book printed in English through to the ages of Spenser, Shakespeare and of the English Civil War, EEBO's content draws on authoritative and respected short-title catalogues of the period and features a substantial number of text transcriptions specially created for the product.
- Early Modern England: Society, Culture and Everyday Life, 1500-1700
This collection of primary sources looks at two centuries of everyday, political, religious, working, trading and administrative life in England during this pivotal epoch. Documents cover an array of topics relating to England during the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, with a significant focus on the lives of ‘everyday’ people. Volumes of correspondence from more prominent families look at governance, politics, monarchy, relations between landowners and tenants, war, politics and relations with England’s neighbours. The materials offer in-depth case studies of different regions in England from the Southeast to the Scottish borders allowing for comparison of experience across the country.
Authorised for ANU alumni access - East India Company
East India Company offers access to a unique collection of India Office Records from the British Library, London. Containing royal charters, correspondence, trading diaries, minutes of council meetings and reports of expeditions, among other document types, this resource charts the history of British trade and rule in the Indian subcontinent and beyond from 1599 to 1947.
Authorised for ANU alumni access - East India Company – India Office Records
Module 4: Correspondence: Early Voyages, Formation and Conflict
This Module consists of 793 volumes, comprising original, draft and abstracted correspondence from IOR Class E plus their associated H- and Z-class indexes, and the Z-class indexes for the Madras and Bombay Presidencies. It includes correspondence between the East India Company and the Board of Commissioners for the Affairs of India (the Board of Control), the Company’s various settlements and Presidencies throughout Asia, government departments, and European houses of agency. The records offer a fascinating insight into the early voyages of the Company and its shifting interests from trade to the gaining of territorial power, and are interspersed with a number of petitions, reports (including quarterly 'Narratives of Proceedings' produced by regional administrations), financial accounts, inventories and other documents.Date Range:1600-1858.
Module 5: Correspondence: Domestic Life, Governance and Territorial Expansion
This module contains 987 documents, comprising the remainder of correspondence in the IOR/E class along with the IOR/Z/E/1 index volumes. The module features correspondence between the East India Company and British Government Departments, and the East India Company’s Bombay and Madras Presidencies, in addition to the Home Correspondence series (IOR/E/1) containing letters between Company officials and merchants, traders, officials and members of the general public. These documents offer valuable insights into the Company’s relationships with the men and women who interacted with them, including merchants, traders, ship’s captains, soldiers and more. Date Range:1600-1859 - East India Company: Laying the Foundations for British Colonial Domination of India, 1752-1774
This collection provides a unique perspective on the complex geopolitical circumstances of India during the 18th century, and how the foundations of British colonialism were established through the activities and campaigns of the East India Company. Drawing from the personal and professional papers of two East India Company employees, Colonel Robert Clive and Brigadier-General John Carnac, the collection offers an insight into how the East India Company became increasingly influential after the weakening of the Mughal Empire during the 18th century.
Robert Clive was a British military commander and eventual Governor of Bengal. Through his political and military actions in India, he amassed vast personal wealth and played a key role in laying the foundations for British domination of India for the next few centuries. John Carnac served as Commander-in-Chief of the East India Company in India between 1760-1761, defeating the French supported forces of the Mughal Empire. He worked in tandem with Clive as they systematically expanded British influence on the subcontinent.
Of particular interest are events such as the pivotal Battle of Plassey in 1757, the ‘Black Hole of Calcutta’ incident, and the British military expedition against the Dutch in 1759. Together, the the papers enable researchers to study how the burgeoning commercial and political power of the East India Company turned into monolithic rule of the Indian subcontinent.
- EBL (SEE ProQuest Ebook Central)
A system designed to facilitate electronic ‘loans’ of eBooks to ANU Library patrons. Full text access of nearly 1,000 books on a wide range of topics, including life and physical sciences, economics and business, social sciences and humanities, law and others. In some cases, patrons are able to download copies or print from the books. All individual titles appear in the ANU Library Catalogue.
- Ebrary (SEE ProQuest Ebook Central)
A multidisciplinary collection of e-books.
- EBSCO eBooks - selected titles
The EBSCO e-book collection contains multidisciplinary e-books representing a broad range of academic subject matter.
- Ecological Society of America journals
Access to the six journals published by the Ecological Society of America, including Ecology, Ecological Applications, Ecological Monographs, Frontiers in Ecology and the Environment, Ecosphere, and Bulletin.
Authorised for ANU alumni access - ECONbase (Elsevier: via Science Direct)
Provided by ScienceDirect, this resource allows full-text access to 120 international economics journals.
- EconLit: International Economic Literature
Published by the American Economic Association, EconLit is an expanded version of the Journal of Economic Literature (JEL) indexes of journals, books and dissertations. It covers both economic theory and application, and include full-text of book reviews published in the Journal of Economic Literature since 1993.
- Education database
The database includes full-text journals, dissertations and other relevant sources on all levels of education, including early childhood education, primary and secondary education, and higher education from 1988 onward.
- EDUCAUSE Center for Applied Research (ECAR)
EDUCAUSE Center for Analysis and Research (ECAR) is a data analytics and research organization dedicated to understanding the role of IT and technology in higher education. The Center publishes a variety of research and analytical resources including research reports, cast studies, data tables and more.
To access full-text, you MUST create an individual username and password when prompted - Eighteenth Century Collections Online (ECCO)
This comprehensive digital collection includes every significant English-language and foreign-language title printed in the United Kingdom, along with thousands of important works from the Americas, between 1701 and 1800. From books and directories to bibles and sheet music to sermons and pamphlets, ECCO features a variety of works by many well-know and lesser-know authors. Most titles are in English, however scholars will also find material in French, German, Latin, Ancient Greek, Italian and Welsh. Included are works from women writers of the 18th Century, collections on the French Revolution, and numerous editions of the works of Shakespeare. Multiple editions of each individual work are offered to enable scholars to make textual comparisons of the works.
- Eighteenth Century Drama: Censorship, Society and the Stage
Delve into the theatrical world of eighteenth century society and explore how the Larpent plays reflect the politics of the time, the role of women, views on race and religion, opinions on empire, and European and British history. Eighteenth Century Drama features three distinct areas:
- Primary source documents; the focus of which is the Larpent collection of plays and Anna Larpent's Diaries
- The London Stage Database; and
- The Biographical Dictionary Database.
Authorised for ANU alumni access - Eighteenth Century Journals I, c1685-1835 (Bodleian Library, Oxford)
The collection provides digital versions of content originally in Adam Matthew Publication’s microfilm project Eighteenth Century Journals from the Hope Collection in the Bodleian Library at Oxford University. It includes journals written for and by women and journals dealing with eighteenth-century drama, providing insights into London life during the period.
Authorised for ANU alumni access - Eighteenth Century Journals II, c1685-1835 (Ransom Center, University of Texas)
The collection is based on the holdings of the Harry Ransom Humanities Research Center at the University of Texas, Austin. As one of the finest collections of rare 17th and 18th century British periodicals in the world, it contains newspapers, magazines, journals, almanacs on diverse themes - politics, theatre and arts, mercantile and trading, current affairs, and literature.
Authorised for ANU alumni access - Eighteenth Century Journals III, c1685-1835 (B.L. Colindale and Cambridge U.)
Materials for Eighteenth Century Journals III are drawn from two sources: the British Newspaper Library at Colindale, London and Cambridge University Library. This section focuses on journals published outside of London. The inclusion of Canadian, Caribbean and Indian journals allows users to explore the ways in which major world events were reported in different areas of the globe. There are also a large number of Irish journals and British provincial publications.
Authorised for ANU alumni access - Eighteenth Century Journals IV, c1685-1835 (Chetham's & Botherton Libraries)
The collection consists of material sourced primarily from Chetham’s Library in Manchester. A collection of rare magazines and newspapers, literary periodicals and political journals have been included to chart the transformation of Manchester during a time of rapid industrialisation and political turmoil. These varied sources are supplemented by a selection of periodicals, many European, from the Brotherton Library, University of Leeds.
Authorised for ANU alumni access - Eighteenth Century Journals V, 1712-1835 (Birmingham, B.L., Cambridge, Moores)
Eighteenth Century Journals V includes the full run of The Lady’s Magazine, 1770-1832 from the British Library, Birmingham Central Library and Cambridge University Library. Readers of the magazine today can trace shifts in public opinion, taste, culture and political climate, making it a major source for scholars of gender, social and literary studies and an invaluable source for any scholar of the eighteenth century.
Authorised for ANU alumni access - Electronic Enlightenment
A network of interconnected letters, documents and correspondence of the early modern period, linking people across Europe, the Americas and Asia from the early seventeenth to the mid-nineteenth century.
- Elgaronline
This is a small collection of selected law e-books published by Edward Elgar.
- Ellis and Messina catalogues of Micropaleontology
Published by Micropaleontology Press , the Ellis and Messina catalogues are the international authority on taxonomy in Foraminifera (since 1942), Ostracoda (since 1954) and Diatoms (since 1982). The catalogues now approach 82,000 original illustrated type descriptions, with about 1,000 added annually