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The following review
appeared in the July 2007 issue of CHOICE:
The Digital Library of the
Catholic Reformation. Alexander Street. Annual academic
subscription price begins at around $450.00, based on budget and
FTE.
URL:
http://www.alexanderstreet.com
[Visited April
‘07] A companion to The Digital Collection of Protestant Texts
(CH, Feb ’04, 41-3359), this rich database will eventually contain
the searchable full text of over 1,000 works from more than 250
European Catholic authors published 1500-1700. New titles are added
quarterly, with a proposed completion date of March 2008. The
database covers a broad range of materials including theological
treatises, apologetic and polemical works, catechisms, homiletic and
devotional materials, biography, and other genres. Major
theological, ecclesiastical, and spiritual authors, alongside many
lesser-known writers, provide a wide perspective on Catholic views
during this period. The works appear in the original Latin,
English, French and other European languages. In addition to
searching text, researchers can view digital images of the pages
(usually first editions of the texts). The powerful search engine,
based on the PhiloLogic software developed at the University of
Chicago, supports Boolean, proximity, and wildcard searching. In
addition to standard searchable fields such as author, date,
language, and place of publication (city or country), one can also
search or refine searches by Biblical citations, genre, or religious
order (e.g., Jesuit, Dominican).
Contents are also
cataloged by an extensive index of more than 150 topics—religious
and theological plus cultural and social (e.g., science, roles of
women, arts, economics). The database offers a number of options
for organizing and displaying search results. Despite the complex
search capabilities, the graphical user interface is fairly
intuitive, with sufficient online help to assist novice users. The
project’s senior editors are Simon Ditchfield (Univ. of York), a
contributor to the “Oxford History of the Christian Church” series,
and Brad Gregory (Univ. of Notre Dame), an award-winning writer and
expert on Reformation and early modern Catholic history. The fact
that the texts are in the original language may limit this
database’s usefulness for many undergraduates. However, its
contents and search capabilities make it an indispensable tool for
graduate students and professors researching the religious thought
of this period, whether they are historians or students of
theology/spirituality.
Summing Up:
Highly recommended. Graduate students and faculty/researchers.—J.
Gresham, Kenrick-Glennon Seminary
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