Thursday, January 29, 2009

New Ancient World Content in JSTOR

Anthropological Linguistics (Arts & Sciences VI)
Release Content:
Vol. 1, No. 1 (January, 1959) – Vol. 46, No. 4 (Winter, 2004)
Moving Wall: 2 years
Publisher: The Trustees of Indiana University on behalf of Anthropological Linguistics
ISSN: 0003-5483
Note: The content for 2005-2006 will be released as soon as the issues become available to JSTOR


Bulletin of the American Schools of Oriental Research. Supplementary Studies (Arts & Sciences Complement)
Release Content:
Nos. 1 – 27 (1945 – 1991)
Publication of this title ceased in 1991.
Publisher: The American Schools of Oriental Research
ISSN: 0145-3661


Journal of the American Research Center in Egypt (Arts & Sciences V)
Release Content:
Vols. 1 – 40 (1962 - 2003)
Moving Wall: 5 years
Publisher: American Research Center in Egypt
ISSN: 0065-9991


Moving Wall Reductions

Latin American Antiquity (Arts & Sciences Complement)
Release Content: Vol. 16, No. 1 (March, 2005) - Vol. 17, No. 4 (December, 2006)
Moving Wall: 2 years
Publisher: Society for American Archaeology
ISSN: 1045-6635
Note: By publisher request, JSTOR is decreasing the moving wall from 3 years to 2 years.


Transactions of the American Philological Association (Arts & Sciences II)
Release Content: Vol. 132, No. 1/2 (Autumn, 2002) - Vol. 133, No. 2 (Autumn, 2003)
Moving Wall: 5 years
Publisher: The Johns Hopkins University Press
ISSN: 0360-5949
Note: By publisher request, JSTOR is reducing the moving wall from fixed to 5 years.
Note: The content for 2001 will be released as soon as the issues become available to JSTOR.

Wednesday, January 28, 2009

Another interesting and promising collaboration

JSTOR and Ithaka are merging under the name Ithaka
The new combined enterprise will be called Ithaka and will be dedicated to helping the academic community use digital technologies to advance scholarship and teaching and to reducing system-wide costs through collective action.

This is a natural step for these organizations. JSTOR and Ithaka already work closely together, sharing a common history, values, and fundamental purpose. During 2008, the Ithaka-incubated resource Aluka was integrated into JSTOR as an initial step, further strengthening ties between the organizations. JSTOR will now join Portico and NITLE as a coordinated set of offerings made available under the Ithaka organizational name.

As one organization, Ithaka will explore how to use its combined knowledge and experience to help its constituents in new ways. “The academic community has invested significantly in the important set of services that we manage and, together, they represent core elements of the networked digital infrastructure needed to support scholarship, research, and teaching. Increasingly we are approached for help on a range of initiatives that seek to leverage this investment and that we think will benefit from stronger coordination across all our areas of expertise and activity,” said Guthrie. “We are very excited about the potential to work with our constituents in even more useful innovative ways through this combination.”

The organization will also remain steadfastly committed to enabling institutions to maximize the benefits they provide to scholars and students while containing expenses. Michael Spinella, Executive Director of JSTOR and now Executive Vice President of Ithaka added, “JSTOR and Ithaka have a history of helping academic institutions by building and managing collectively-supported large-scale resources with an aim of developing sustainable models that deliver greater value than institutions could achieve alone. Now is the time when we can work even more closely together to develop and sustain the kinds of shared solutions that will be vital to the success of educational institutions in the future.”

In addition to JSTOR, Portico, and NITLE, Ithaka’s existing research and strategic services groups will remain important parts of the enterprise. The board will be composed of Ithaka and JSTOR Trustees, with Henry Bienen, President of Northwestern University, serving as Chairman and Paul Brest, President of the Hewlett Foundation as Vice Chairman.


About JSTOR

JSTOR is an independent not-for-profit organization dedicated to helping the scholarly community discover, use, and build upon a wide range of intellectual content in a trusted digital archive. The JSTOR archive includes over 800 leading academic journals across the humanities, social sciences, and sciences, as well as conference proceedings, transactions, select monographs and other materials valuable for academic work. More than 5,200 academic and other institutions in 143 countries and over 600 learned societies, university presses, cultural heritage, and other content contributors participate in JSTOR. Since the public launch of the archive, over 750 million articles and other items have been accessed by researchers and students throughout the world.

About Ithaka

Ithaka is an independent not-for-profit organization with a mission to accelerate the productive uses of information technologies for the benefit of higher education worldwide. Ithaka provides research, strategic, and administrative services to promising not-for-profit projects, helping them to develop sustainable organizational and business models. It also works with established institutions that are rethinking the way they serve their core constituents. Ithaka includes Portico a digital preservation archive to which more than 8,200 e-journals and 4,600 e-books are committed, and NITLE, a suite of services supporting the innovative use of technology in liberal arts education.

This is going to be interesting to watch

An interesting and promising collaboration

The eJournal portals Persée and Revues.org are collaborating to provide full-text searching of both sites. Persée serves digitized backfiles, and Revues.org hosts recent issues.

The initial suite of journals includes:

Tuesday, January 27, 2009

ACLS Humanities E-Book update

The new HEB News (Vol. 3, No. 1) has just been released and will be available shortly at the link below.

This issue announces publication of a new HEB White Paper on XML Conversion. Announces it but doesn't yet give a link. Hmmm...

It also introduces new viewing options for the books on the HEB site and a new title-list format.

And last, but not least, it announces 500 new titles added to the HEB site in December 2008. But it doesn't seem to specify what they are. Hmmm...

All issues of HEB News can also be downloaded here

New OI publication online

I have updated AWOL - The Ancient World Online - 2: The Oriental Institute Electronic Publications Initiative, with the addition of

Monday, January 26, 2009

New online journals

New, or newly discovered, online journals:

Orientalia Parthenopea Journal
A group of young researchers who completed their studies within the milieu of the Università degli Studi di Napoli “L’Orientale” or carried out their post-graduate research work in the same university started the publication of Orientalia Parthenopea Journal in June 2005. The journal collects essays on Eastern Cultures from Eastern Europe to Far East Asia and Comparative Studies.The editorial board of Orientalia Parthenopea reserves for itself the right to use experienced national or even international referees to evaluate the quality of the articles. Among our referees figure the following scholars: Giorgio Amitrano, Michaela Böhmig, Gianluca Coci, Riccardo Contini, Lorenzo Declich, Francesco De Sio Lazzari, Amedeo Di Francesco, Salvatore Diglio, Gennaro Gervasio, Hayashida Kenzo, Giancarlo Lacerenza, Amedeo Maiello, Luigia Melillo, Shyam Manohar Pandey, Adriano Rossi, Domenico Silvestri, Adolfo Tamburello, Giovanni Verardi.All scholars for whom qualitative research methodology are basic perspectives of orientalistic disciplines, are welcomed to submit their articles and support our initiative. There will be published empirical, theoretical and methodological articles applicable to all fields and specializations within orientalistic disciplines.Subject CoverageTopics include, but are not limited to, the following:History, Archeology, Art, Medicine, Linguistics, Literature, Comparative Studies, Philosophy, Religion, etc.


I Quaderni del Ramo d'Oro
"I Quaderni del Ramo d'Oro on-line" costituiscono la rivista del Centro Interdipartimentale di Studi Antropologici sulla Cultura Antica (Università di Siena).Iscritti nel Registro Periodici del Tribunale di Siena (l'ISSN è in corso di attribuzione) e di consultazione libera e gratuita, "I Quaderni del Ramo d'Oro on-line" pubblicano contributi previa valutazione da parte del Comitato Scientifico.

Sunday, January 25, 2009

Open access promotes sales

This is interesting. 23,000 % increase in sales after open access is granted?


Granted it's Monty Python (Graham Chapman, John Cleese, Terry Gilliam, Eric Idle, Terry Jones, Michael Palin, &c. but still, two of their films were about the ancient world (more or less): Monty Python and the Holy Grail (1975) and Monty Python's Life of Brian (1979), and they engaged archaology from time to time: Archaeology Today; and enjoyed a sophisticated argument; and poked fun at the academy at home and abroad - not too different from lots of people I know. In any case a 23,000 % increase in sales after granting open access is a nice benchmark.