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Jessie Ball duPont Library

Russian 312: Advanced Russian Language through Late-Soviet and Contemporary Film

Finding Russian Studies Books in the Library

Below is a very general outline of the major Library of Congress Classification areas in which materials in Russian studies can be found.  Using the library catalog is best to pinpoint materials; however, the areas listed below can also help guide you to areas in which you can browse for materials.

AE 55  Russian Encyclopedias

DK 1-901  History of Russia

HM273  Russian communism

JA84.R9  Russian political science

ML300  Russian music

N6987-6999   Russian art

PG  Russian language and literature, including dictionaries

PN 2720-2728  Russian theater

How to read Library of Congress Call Numbers 

Find Film Books

Film Studies books usually have call numbers that start with PN, and Cinematography books generally have call numbers starting with TR. These books are on the ground floor of the library, find a map here.

Film books on a shelf in the library

Using TigerSearch

Screenshot of the top of a TigerSearch results page

TigerSearch searches our library’s holdings along with the contents of most of our databases. Some databases are not accessible to TigerSearch, so if you want to search those databases, you need to go to them directly. (See a list of databases not included in TigerSearch here.)

The filters give you lots of ways to target your results, by language, by geographic area, by type of material. Buttons also allow you to limit your search to peer reviewed articles or items that have full text available online.

Search on the library homepage

Request an Interlibrary Loan

WorldCat Search Box

Search for an item in libraries near you:
WorldCat.org >>

Google Books Search

Google Book Search

Searching for books and other resources

Use the library catalog to identify and locate books, video, audio and other material in our library. It is often best to begin with a detailed keyword search. Once you have identified an item that is within the scope of your research, use the subject headings found in the record describing it to locate similar materials. Also, when you retrieve a book from the shelf, you may wish to peruse the books shelved near it as they are likely to be on the same, or a related, subject.

Use WorldCat to identify materials held by other libraries around the world. Most of these you will need to request via interlibrary loan should you wish to use them. Sewanee ILL, our interlibrary loan system, is linked below. Please feel free to use the interlirbary loan service, but be sure you have planned for the time it will take for books to be shipped here. Articles are usually delivered electronically and, therefore, much quicker.

Google Book Search offers certain advantages such as the ability to search the full-text of works as well as the ability to view the text of works that are no longer restricted by copyright. If you find something in Google Books that appears to be useful for your research, but you cannot view the book, be sure to check to see if the book is in our library. If not, you can place an interlibrary loan request.