Are you researching contemporary themes, artists or designers? Have you thought about using newspapers to complement the academic sources you are using?
They can help you find out how themes are being covered in the media, you can access reviews of exhibitions and much more!
Newsstream contains online full-text access to over 600 UK regional, national and broadsheet newspapers as well as international press. The Library subscribes to this resource so you don’t have to pay to access it. Coverage goes back as far as January 1982 to the present day for some titles, although this varies by publication.
To help you do a health check on whether an information source is worth using or not, why not try using our Evaluating Information checklist.
News on television and radio
Remember, you might also be interested in how the news is reported on the TV and radio, and if you are in the United Kingdom you can use Box of Broadcasts (B0B) to do the same types of searching as you can in Newsstream for print media.
Why should I use Newsstream when I can just look on Google?
- No paywall in Newsstream – the library has paid on your behalf.
- Not just online content – you get the entire archive of what appeared in print and online. In free newspaper archives you never know what will be there and what won’t.
- See how the same event is covered by different newspapers and authors. Newsstream has all the content in one place, rather than having to go to each news outlet’s individual website.
- Newsstream sometimes has the pdf of the layout of print news magazines
- Search precisely and comprehensively – Newsstream is designed for research and scholarship whereas Google is designed to harvest your data.
- More!
Watch this 10-minute video tutorial which walks you through how to access Newsstream from anywhere you have Internet access.
This week we are featuring a key journal in photography – the British Journal of Photography.
Journals are an excellent source of research material as they are where you’ll find recently published research and ideas.
The Library has a subscription to the print version of this magazine which can be found in the Library@DavidGoldman.
Happy reading!