Religion 3346: Islamic Literatures

Research Sources


1. Finding Books

Use Quest to find books in our collection; you'll find that essays in books on religion will also be found in the ATLA Religion Database mentioned below.

Reference Books (for background, bibliographies)

Encyclopedia of Religion   REF BL 31 E46 2005
This is the best single scholarly encyclopedia for the field.  Many lengthy articles make using the index volume essential for finding your topic!

The Oxford Encyclopedia of the Modern Islamic World   REF DS 35.53 O95 1995

The Encyclopaedia of Islam   REF DS 37 E523
Extensive scholarly resource on Islam

The Muslim Almanac : a Reference Work on the History, Faith, Culture, and Peoples of Islam    
REF BP 40 M83 1996

Encyclopedia of the Modern Middle East and North Africa  REF  DS 43 E53 2004

Encyclopedia of Islam and the Muslim World   REF BP40 .E525 2004

The Encyclopedia of Women's' Issues Worldwide  REF HQ 1115 G74 2003
Volume 4:  The Middle East and North Africa

Encyclopedia of Women and Islamic Cultures   REF BP173.4 .E538
New encyclopedia that will take several years to be completed

 

Scholarly Books

Use the Keyword Search option in Quest to combine concepts: 

Note that keyword searching will also find individual essays in books that might not show up when doing a normal subject search.

Use truncation to look for all forms of a word root ( islam? for "islam," "islamic")
[Note that Quest uses the ? sign; most other databases use the asterisk *]

 

Biographical Entries and Criticism from Literary Resource Center


Jallaudin Rumi
Nizami
Hanan al-Shaykh
Alifa Rifaat
Tayeb Salih
Hoda Barakat (not in LRC; try various web search engines)
Mohsin Hamid
Ghassan Kanafani (not in LRC; try various web search engines)
Yusuf Idris
Naomi Shihab Nye

Orhan Pamuk

 



2. Finding Journal Articles

Use appropriate journal databases from the library's Databases web page.  Suggestions for different disciplines are found via the library's "Find Resources by Subject" page.  Examples include:

ATLA Religion Database
Our most comprehensive index to journals in religion.  Has more coverage of Christianity than other religions, but does index most of the respected scholarly journals on Islam and other religions. Doesn't contain a large percentage of full-text articles, but Trinity does have access to print and electronic versions of many of the journals.
 
Academic Search Premier
Interdisciplinary index to several thousand academic journals and popular periodicals, much of it in full text.  Limit your results to scholarly journals with the checkbox on the search page.
 
Humanities Abstracts
Covers several hundred core titles in literature, philosophy, religion, etc.  Less full text available here than in Academic Search Premier, but note that we own the majority of journals in this index.
 
Literature Resource Center
A largely full-text resource with articles from literary reference books and scholarly and popular periodicals.
 
MLA International Bibliography
Our most comprehensive literary database, though this means that many titles may not be held locally.  If you search for authors as subjects, the best search entry is last name first; e.g.,  "Rifaat, Alifa."
 

If the article listed in the index is not linked to full text, check the journal title (not the article title) in the library's Journals database (one of the top buttons on the library home page).  This service indicates if the library has a print subscription or if the article may be in full-text format in another database to which we subscribe.  For example, a search to find the journal Islam and Christian-Muslim Relations shows it is found online from 1999 forward in three different databases:

(Also, you can currently click on the TOUR icon after the citation on your database results screen, which will save you a couple of steps.  This is a service we are testing with some databases.)

Does Trinity not have any access to the journal you need?   We will get a copy of a journal article (or borrow a book) from another library for you, almost always at no charge.  But be prepared to wait about 7-10 days on average for us to receive the item.  Use ILLiad to request an item we don't own.



3. Using Other Internet Sources

Check with your professor about the acceptance of non-scholarly Internet resources in your references.  There are a number of higher quality web resources on Islam that are included in the religion web guides found here.  Remember that websites are rarely "peer-reviewed" by scholars, so extra care in evaluating these sources is essential.

How do I evaluate Internet resources?

 

Country Studies Materials on the Internet

Country Studies
Excellent, lengthy coverage of countries; best single starting place.  Great overview of history, population, social customs, and more.
 
The Economist Country Briefings
Short but incisive coverage; use menu on left side for viewing different sections.  Note that the longer reports require a fee at the Economist web site, but we have access to recent Country Reports in another database (see below).
 
GeographyIQ
Brief data largely taken from CIA World Fact Book.
Country Report
Country Profile
Country Review
These are excellent reports that you can access through our various periodical databases.  Emphasis is more on business and economy than culture, however. Recommended fast search method:  click on Journals link on library home page; enter your country name and one of the words in the titles above (e.g., egypt country).  Browse the list of titles and click on one to go to that publication's index page. Note that some of the very most recent reports may be excluded due to publishers' embargoes, but this is usually no more than six months or so.
 
MENIC: Middle Eastern Network Information Center
Excellent index to web-based information from the University of Texas.
 
Britannica Online
Very good source for overviews of the history of any country.

 



4. Compiling the Bibliography

First, cite every idea you use from one of your readings!  Avoid plagiarism and also let your professor know which creative ideas are yours.

Second, use the proper citation format.  The MLA citation style is commonly used in the humanities.  Online citation examples can be found here.

You may want to use our new bibliography management software, RefWorks.  RefWorks can store your citations, automatically format them into any style desired, and print a reference list for you.  You can save references from many databases, such as ATLA Religion Database, and export them directly from your search results into a folder in RefWorks.



Prepared by Christopher Nolan
Last updated April 2007