New FREE resource: Shamaa

Hi friends! Hot off the proverbial presses, a new FREE online bibliographical resource.

Shamaa is a free bibliographic database, web-based, trilingual (Arabic, English and French) in Education . It covers Master theses, PhD dissertations, articles, books and reports from a large number of universities, institutions and organizations from Arab countries since 2007.

Shamaa’s Mission: Shamaa provides specialists and stakeholders free access to the educational publications produced in the Arab countries, by making them available on the Internet. The database includes bibliographic information, abstracts and, when available, the full text of educational studies published in Arabic, English or French.

Shamaa

Shamaa’s Vision: Shamaa aspires to be the main reference for researchers and others concerned with educational knowledge in its capacity as a documentation database for all sorts of intellectual educational production in the Arab countries.

 

You will be able to access Shamaa website and its database at the following link:  http://www.shamaa.org/en/component/Main/index.asp

Trial: MultiDataOnline

Hi friends!

We are currently trialing MutiDataOnline : http://www.multidataonline.com/#task-splash. This resource is in fact four databases covering: one for general news (indexes 52 dailies and weeklies); another for specialized periodicals (covering 225 periodicals); a third database for book reviews; and a fourth database entitled Index Arabicus.

Username: mcgill

Password: accessmcgill

Expiry date: October 13, 2012 (end of day)

Let us know what you think!

New publication

Hi friends! Dr. Robert Wisnovsky has published a collaborative work with many different colleagues, including McGill’s Dr. Faith Wallis.

“This volume contains case studies that examine how medieval cultures (western European, Arab/Islamic and Jewish) adopted ideas from the past and from each other in fields such as philosophy, literature, religion, and medicine.

In this volume the McGill University Research Group on Transmission, Translation, and Transformation in Medieval Cultures and their collaborators initiate a new reflection on the dynamics involved in receiving texts and ideas from antiquity or from other contemporary cultures. For all their historic specificity, the western European, Arab/Islamic and Jewish civilizations of the Middle Ages were nonetheless co-participants in a complex web of cultural transmission that operated via translation and inevitably involved the transformation of what had been received. This three-fold process is what defines medieval intellectual history. Every act of transmission presumes the existence of some ‘efficient cause’ – a translation, a commentary, a book, a library, etc. Such vehicles of transmission, however, are not passive containers in which cultural products are transported. On the contrary: the vehicles themselves select, shape, and transform the material transmitted, making ancient or alien cultural products usable and attractive in another milieu. The case studies contained in this volume attempt to bring these larger processes into the foreground.  They lay the groundwork for a new intellectual history of medieval civilizations in all their variety, based on the core premise that these shared not only a cultural heritage from antiquity but, more importantly, a broadly comparable ‘operating system’ for engaging with that heritage.  Each was a culture of transmission, claiming ownership over the prestigious knowledge inherited from the past. Each depended on translation. Finally, each transformed what it appropriated.”

Vehicles of Transmission, Translation, and Transformation in Medieval Textual Culture

AskZad trial

McGill Library is currently trialling AskZad, the largest Arabic digital library that offers an extensive referential, cultural and academic database.
It includes more than 24,000 e-books, more than 7,000 dissertations from elite universities across the Middle East, more than 9,000 peer reviewed articles, Academic Journals Index of more than 650 Journals, as well as news Index of more than 1200 Newspapers, Magazines and News Websites.

Check it out and give us feedback!

Middle East and Islamic Studies Library Orientation

The ISL is offering a Middle East and Islamic Studies Library Orientation session next  Monday (Sept. 10), 11 am-1 pm in room RM-23 (Redpath). From Library facilities and services to specific resources and how to find them, you’ll learn all there is to know about the Library to start your academic career on the right foot. Feel free to drop by!