Three new ejournals added today

Added to the JURN site-index today:—

Journal of Song Yuan Studies (1970-1977) (“Chinese history, society, and culture from the founding of the Song dynasty to the end of the Yuan dynasty”)

Worldview magazine (1958-1985) (Carnegie Council, magazine of “ethics in international policy”)

Australian Universities Review (Seems mostly of interest to managers, but some articles are relevant to the arts and humanities)

+

CHARM Proceedings (1983-2009) (History of marketing. Conference on “historical analysis and research in marketing”)

Eight new titles added

Added to the JURN site-index today:—

Radical Designist : a design culture journal, The

Songklanakarin : E-Journal of Social Sciences & Humanities (a Thai ejournal)

Altitude : an e-journal of emerging humanities work

Clothesline : the online journal of costume and dress

Newsletter of the Aga Khan Program for Islamic Architecture at Harvard University

Schuylkill

Journal of Art History & Museum And Gallery Studies (Just indexing the TOC page, since the articles are stored numerically in a repository — so to index them would be to include the entire repository)

Montage (University of Iowa Art History Society)

Seven new ejournals added

Added to the JURN site-index today:—

AERAGRAM : official newsletter of Ancient Egypt Research Associates

American Numismatic Society Magazine

ANKH : Journal of Egyptology and African Civilisations

al-Bardiyyat : newsletter of the International Society for Arabic Papyrology

as-Sikka : The Online Journal of The Islamic Coins Group

    ( Hat-tip, for the above: AWOL blog )

Kyoto Bulletin of Islamic Area Studies

History of Reading news (1976-2008) and Book Reviews

DeepDyve

DeepDyve has announced their interesting pay-per-view so-called “rental” model of access to academic papers in… “scientific, technical and medical research”. I’ll be curious to see if it works financially. Looking at the range of journals indexed shows there are small scattering of arts and humanities titles, such as Critical Studies in Media Communication and Feminist Media Studies, although in both cases only articles from 2008 are available.

Annoying, and misleadingly, most DeepDyve articles are flagged as…

deep-free

…when all you can actually access is a short abstract, rather than the full-text article.