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EAST ASIA (Western-language collection)

For Chinese- and Japanese-language materials, please see East Asia Library.

Stanford's principal Western-language collection for Asian studies, housed in Green Library and SAL, emphasizes East Asia (China, Japan, and Korea), with only general coverage of Southeast Asia; the collection on South Asia (principally India and Pakistan), dormant since the early 1970s, was reactivated about 1995.

The Green collection, which in late 2001 absorbed the Hoover Institution collection on twentieth-century political, social, and military conditions and events, covers the gamut of interests. Other, more specialized campus libraries may also have relevant holdings, including the Art Library, the map collection in the Branner Earth Sciences Library, the Cubberley Education Library, the Jackson Library in the Graduate School of Business, the Crown Law Library, and the Music Library.

As of September 2003, Green's holdings on East Asia included approximately 52,000 monographs, with roughly 1000 titles added per year. The library subscribes to at least 400 nongovernmental Asia-focused serials and 200 East Asian government serials in addition to worldwide population and other censuses as available. Green and SAL hold at least another 250 noncurrent serials on East Asia.

Socrates provides catalog access to all Stanford library materials except East Asia Library (EAL) titles catalogued before 1984; a user's guide to Socrates is available at the same URL. Non-Roman scripts are currently available only in the Research Libraries Information Network (RLIN) database using Internet Explorer. Other institutions' catalogs are also available online: Melvyl for the University of California; RLIN for most major U.S. research universities; and OCLC for most RLIN libraries and many other major institutions worldwide.

The Bibliography of Asian Studies (BAS) is the authoritative bibliography in its field; 1971– is available to Stanford IP addresses here; hard copy is also available for 1956–1991. Because BAS is very slow—most papers are indexed about six years after original publication—the locally-compiled Bibliography of East Asian Studies indexes about 125 of Stanford's serials for 1990– and is updated monthly.

Numerous discipline-specific bibliographies are available, either in print or online; please consult the Web pages for those disciplines.

Other locally-created finding aids for Western-language sources include an annotated bibliography of Western-language sources on the PRC economy during 1978–1994 (Z3108.E2 W44 1995 EA Ref).

Stanford has extensive sources for in-depth research, primarily microfilmed U.S. and British government archives dealing with political, diplomatic, social, and economic conditions and events in China, Taiwan, Japan, Korea, etc., from the early nineteenth century onward; many such sets are accompanied by printed guides to their contents.

The Hoover Institution collections also include very impressive holdings of primary source materials, including virtually all SCAP publications for occupation-era Japan and numerous newspapers published in Japanese-American internment camps.

The Hoover Institution Archives have substantial Asia-relevant holdings; detailed finding aids have been compiled for many archival sets. Selected collections are listed for China and Japan.

A list of recent acquisitions on East Asia is compiled biweekly.

If you need any help, please contact Zhaohui Xue in Room 416 of the East Asia Library, by phone at (650) 725-3439, or by e-mail .



Click below for selected Stanford print resources on:


Click here for selected online research sources.

Last modified: June 26, 2007

     
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