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Alexander
Street Press wins The Charleston Advisor Reader's Choice Award
for Best New Product
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Eileen Lawrence, Alexander Street Press
800-889-5937 ext 2
lawrence@alexanderstreet.com
The Charleston Advisor, in an article by George S. Machovec,
Managing Editor, in the July issue (v. 3, no. 1), reported the
first TCA Readers’ Choice
Best and Worst Product Awards.
The Best New Product (nominated by the Board) went to Alexander Street
Press.
“Votes were taken on the TCA Website, and additional input
was received from the TCA editorial board,” reports the article.
Eileen Lawrence, Vice President of Sales and Marketing, said: “We’re
delighted to receive this award. The Charleston Advisor sets exacting
standards and we're pleased to be recognized for meeting them.
She goes on, “Libraries have recognized our databases’ unique
depth of indexing, the careful selection of content, and our ongoing
interaction with scholars and librarians during the development.
This award confirms what we’ve been hearing from our customers.”
In February of this year, Alexander Street launched its flagship
product, North American Women's Letters and Diaries, Colonial-1950,
the largest electronic collection of women's diaries and correspondence
ever assembled. The collection includes 150,000 pages of published
letters and diaries, both in and out of copyright, plus 4,000 pages
of previously unpublished manuscripts, all in electronic format for
the first time. Represented are 1,500 women of all age groups and
life stages, various ethnicities, all geographical regions, the famous
and the unknown. The diaries provide a detailed record of how the
women lived, worked, read, dreamed, made choices, cared for loved
ones, prayed, and shared their pastimes. The third release of Women's
Letters and Diaries is due in September.
In June, Alexander Street released the functional prototype of The
American Civil War: Letters and Diaries. The database knits together
more than 100,000 pages of diaries, memoirs, and letters, plus 4,000
pages of previously unpublished manuscripts in facsimile form, providing
access to thousands of views on almost every aspect of the war. Detailed
firsthand descriptions of historical characters and events, glimpses
of daily life in the army, anecdotes about key events and personages,
accounts of sufferings at home, a day-by-day chronology with associated
writings, and a complete battles database provide an immediacy and
a richness that are unmatched in public sources. The second release
is due this month.
This fall, Early Encounters in North America: Peoples, Cultures,
and the Environment will be released. The collection, which brings
together hundreds of primary sources, documents the relationships
among peoples in North America from 1534 to 1850. The collection
focuses on personal accounts and provides unique perspectives from
all of the protagonists, including traders, slaves, missionaries,
explorers, soldiers, native peoples, and officials, both men and
women. The variety of cultures in early North America was unprecedented.
Dutch, English, French, Spanish, Italian, Portuguese, Africans, and
a host of American Indian peoples developed a complex history of
interactions. This collection allows scholars not only to see the
effect of European cultures on Indians, but equally to explore the
Indians' contributions to the Europeans. Students of natural history
will have instantaneous access to hundreds of years of recorded observations.
Within these collections are thousands of descriptions of lands,
fauna, and flora, along with maps and illustrations reproduced to
archival quality.
Also this fall, customers will see the release, in complete form,
of Scottish Women Poets of the Romantic Period. This electronic collection
of over sixty volumes of lyric poetry by Scottish women written between
1789 and 1832, fills a gap in our access to this large and comprehensive
body of work. Conventional anthologies and histories of Scottish
literature have been composed largely of works by male authors. Yet
there were dozens of Scottish women poets who were active at the
time and whose work and influence were familiar and admired by their
male contemporaries. This collection presents, for the first time,
a large body of poetry - not mere editorial selections, but entire
volumes in electronic form - fully indexed and searchable.
In January, Alexander Street, in partnership with Ad Fontes (www.ad-fontes.com),
will release The Digital Library of Classical Protestant Texts (the
CPT). In the 19th century, Jacques-Paul Migne dramatically advanced
theological scholarship by assembling a massive collection of Greek
and Latin writings from the early Christian and medieval eras. The
CPT will have a similar impact upon theological scholarship in the
21st century, by bringing together an enormous collection of Christian
texts from the Reformation and post-Reformation eras - in electronic
format for the first time, fully searchable and XML encoded. The
database covers the works of several hundred writers, including all
of Luther, Calvin, Zwingli, Melanchthon, Bucer and others. Many of
the books are rare. No library in this country holds even a third
of them, and most have never been reprinted. There will be facsimiles,
as well as selected English translations added over time. It will
cover the Lutheran writers, the Reformed and Presbyterian works,
and the Anabaptists and Anglicans --- more than 1,500 works in all.
Alexander Street Press, L.L.C., is an academic publisher of electronic
full-text databases in the humanities and social sciences. The company
is developing databases in history, women’s studies, sociology,
popular culture, film studies, literature, the arts, and more. Alexander
Street Press is located in Alexandria, Virginia.
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For more information on Alexander Street Press and its products,
contact Eileen Lawrence, Vice President of Sales and Marketing, (800)
889-5937 or lawrence@alexanderst.com, or visit http://alexanderstreetpress.com.

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