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Alexander
Street Press Announces Charter Customers
FOR
IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Alexander Street Press,
L.L.C., a new publisher of electronic works in the humanities,
is proud to announce its list of charter customers: Boston College,
California Digital Library (for all ten campuses of the University
of California System), Columbia University, Emory University,
Harvard University, Johns Hopkins University, Michigan State
University,
New York University, Ohio State University, Penn State University,
Stanford University, University of Chicago, University of Notre
Dame, University of Wisconsin, Vassar College, and Yale University.
Stephen Rhind-Tutt, President of Alexander Street Press, says, “These
libraries have demonstrated their confidence in our databases
and our mission. We have pledged to put the values of librarianship
and scholarship back in the center of electronic publishing.
Our charter customers have confirmed that we have taken the right
course.”
Eileen Lawrence, Vice President of Sales and Marketing, adds, “We
saw a need to produce electronic resources that captured the
traditional values of publishing. Instead of merely digitizing
pages, we are collaborating with scholars and subject specialists,
carefully constructing collections, then indexing very deeply.
The result is a database that answers questions in ways never
before possible. Our charter customers have chosen our products
for these values.”
Alexander Street’s charter customers have purchased one
or more of the following electronic databases: North American
Women’s Letters and Diaries, Colonial-1950; American Civil
War: Letters and Diaries; Early American Encounters: Peoples,
Cultures, and the Environment, 1534-1924; American Film Scripts
Online.
North American Women’s Letters and Diaries, Colonial-1950
is the largest electronic collection of women’s diaries
and correspondence ever assembled. The collection includes more
than 100,000 pages of published letters and diaries from Colonial
times to 1950, plus 4,000 pages of previously unpublished manuscripts,
in electronic format for the first time. Drawn from more than
1,000 sources, including journal articles, pamphlets, newsletters,
monographs, and conference proceedings, the writings represent
all age groups and life stages, all ethnicities, all geographical
regions, the famous and the unknown. The diaries provide a detailed
record of what women wore, the conditions under which they worked,
what they ate, what they read, and how they amused themselves.
We can see how frequently they attended church, how they viewed
their connection to God, and how they prayed. We can explore
their relationships with lovers and family and friends.
The American Civil War: Letters and Diaries knits together more
than 100,000 pages of diaries, letters and 4,000 pages of previously
unpublished manuscripts in facsimile form, memoirs that provide
fast access to thousands of views on almost every aspect of the
war, plus. The writings of politicians, generals, slaves, landowners,
seamen, wives, and spies are included. The letters and diaries
give both the Northern and the Southern perspectives, as well
as the views of foreign observers. Detailed firsthand descriptions
of historical characters and events, glimpses of daily life in
the army, anecdotes about key events and personages, and accounts
of sufferings at home, written for private consumption, provide
an immediacy and a richness that are unmatched in public sources.
(First release spring 2001.)
Exploration Narratives: Encounters with the New World, 1534-1924
presents the exploration of the New World in tremendous depth,
and with a vast collection of supporting material that includes
prints, drawings, paintings, maps, bibliographies, letters, photographs,
and original facsimile pages. The database includes more than
100,000 pages of diverse narratives from the 16th century to
the early 20th century and covers all regions of North America.
Contents include important works by Thwaites’s, including
all 73 volumes of the Jesuit Relations and all 32 volumes of
Early Western Travels, as well as Lewis and Clark’s papers,
Hakluyt materials, rare captivity narratives, travel and war
narratives, letters, journals, memoirs, and more. (First release
summer 2001.)
American Film Scripts Online is the largest, most highly structured,
and best indexed electronic archive of American films available.
It is a bibliographic and biographical database of directors,
scriptwriters, and the full text of the movies themselves. Developed
for scholarship in drama, literature, popular culture, history,
sociology, film studies, anthropology, race relations, ethnic
studies, and more, American Film Scripts Online enables a kind
of text analysis never before possible. Reaching back to the
earliest films and following through to the present, the database
presents the medium’s reflection of American attitudes
and life. Unlike scattered resources currently found on the Web,
American Film Scripts Online is authoritative, based on agreements
with the various studios and a major film research institute.
(First release summer 2001.)
Alexander Street Press, L.L.C., is an academic publisher of
electronic full-text databases in the humanities and social sciences.
The company, launched in June 2000 by executives of the former
Chadwyck-Healey company, is developing databases in history,
women’s studies, sociology, popular culture, film studies,
the arts, and more. Alexander Street Press is located in Alexandria,
Virginia.
For More Information Contact:
Eileen Lawrence,
Alexander Street Press
Tel: 800-889-5937
Fax: 501-423-7500
Internet: lawrence@alexanderstreet.com

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