Artefact is a peer reviewed journal published by the Irish Association of Art Historians in consultation with academics from universities across Ireland, north and south.
Department of Philosophy at State University of New York, Buffalo. Sections: Contemporary Ontology; History of Ontology; Ontological Engineering; Biomedical Ontology
(17th, 18th, and 19th Centuries) Currently in Print or Online a bibliography by Licia and Larry Kuenning showing books, pamphlets, letters, and other documents written by members of the Society of Friends during its early and middle periods
Saskatchewan Labour History Workshop The Canadian Committee on Labour History is pleased to announce plans for the annual labour history workshop. The organizing committee is led by Lorne Brown and Don Kossick, and the event is co-sponsored with the Saska
very large bibliography on Critical Whiteness Studies, broken down into various categories; not interactive and does not lead to full text essays; worth going to the library to follow up on
one of the largest set of links, updated regularly, to all aspects of communication; many political themes; a wide range of disciplinary approaches included; highly recommended
large collection of academic essays; "such diverse topics as art, architecture, race, Internet studies, sexuality, drama, design, multimedia, and current social issues. Also hypertext and streaming audio and video recordings."
Good place to start research for both scholars and students, comprehensive resource collection for film studies at UC-Berkeley: Bibliographies here for many film/TV Topics,Themes, Genres, Directors; on National Cinemas; and on Individual Films/Videos; Ful
research and translations by a small group of people interested in developing critical approaches to philosophy and social and political thought. It involves theoretical openness as an experimental method, as an ethical principle and as a social practice
"Historiophoty" is Robert Rosentstone's term for our representing history visually and filmically; in contrast, according to White, is "historiography," representing history verbally, in prose.