Latin American Studies Consortium of New England
Guide to Library Holdings
Introduction  Reciprocal Borrowing Agreement 
 
Brown University University of  Connecticut  University of Massachusetts/Amherst  Yale University 
Selective Inventory of Resources  Selective Inventory of Resources  Selective Inventory of Resources Selective Inventory of Resources 
Policies & Procedures  Policies & Procedures Policies & Procedures  Policies/Procedures
Directions to Brown  Directions to UConn Directions to UMass  Directions to Yale 
 
 

Introduction

The creation of the Latin American Studies Consortium of new England at the University of Connecticut, Brown University, and the University of Massachusetts, Amherst in the Fall of 1987, as a national resource center funded under Title VI of the Higher Education Act, formalized the cooperation and resource sharing that had been going on among our programs for several years.  In the Fall of 1997 Yale University joined the Consortium,  further strengthening informal relationships as well as opportunities for cooperative ventures. With the support of Title VI funds, we have been able to employ a number of visiting faculty who have taught at the institutions each academic year.  Faculty exchange among the consortium institutions has also taken place throughout the years.

The compilation of this guide to the Latin American library resources of the UConn-Brown-UMass-Yale Consortium (first published in 1989) introduces students and faculty to the breadth and strengths of each other's library holdings.  Each university boasts a basic library collection that strongly supports undergraduate and graduate training in several disciplines within Latin American Studies.  Taken together, the library collections of the Consortium offer phenomenal primary and secondary resources to students, faculty, and visiting scholars.  This revised edition adds new categories of materials and information as well as completely updating the entire guide.

The information presented here does not do justice to the range or wealth of resources available at UConn, Brown, UMass, and Yale.  Rather, it describes each collection briefly in terms of subject and geographic emphasis, and presents a selective inventory of microform resources, special collections, and, in some cases, journal collections and electronica.  It also explains how to gain access to the materials (see the Cooperative Reciprocal Borrowing Agreement) and offers directions to each institution.

I have received much appreciated assistance in my efforts to revise this guide from Mark Rios, a  graduate assistant from Latin American Studies at UConn, as well as from my colleagues at the  other Consortium libraries,  Peter Stern at UMass,  Jenny Fierro-Wallace at Brown University and Cesar Rodriguez at Yale University.  I also want to particularly thank my colleague at the University of Connecticut Library, Nancy Martin, for her time and interest in creating the web version of this guide.
 
________________________________________________________________________
 

Peter Allison is Principal Bibliographer/Collection Development Team Leader and Interim Latin American Library Liaison at Univeristy of Connecticut, Storrs.

Mark Rios is a candidate for his Master's degree in  International Studies (Latin America ) at the University of Connecticut, Storrs.

Return to top


Reciprocal Borrowing Agreement
Latin American Studies Consortium of New England
University of Massachusetts Library at Amherst
University of Connecticut Library at Storrs
Brown University Library
Yale University Library
 
July 1993
(Rev. August 1997)
 
In support of the cooperative Latin American Studies program existing among the four participating institutions, each Library agrees to provide, without charge, Library borrowing and on-site use privileges to students and faculty of all four institutions who are actively engaged in Latin American study or research, and who are borrowers in good standing at the home institution.

All individuals taking advantage of this agreement will be subject to the rules and regulations (including fines) of the lending Library. Each Library will identify the library site(s) that will be available to participants, the procedure necessary for registering at the library, and the various circulation, borrowing, renewal, recall, return, billing, privilege suspension, card replacement, and on-site policies for the library.

The Latin American Studies Center at the home institution will guarantee the lending library full reimbursement of charges incurred by their students and faculty at the other three institutions in the event that the normal billing process fails to resolve such issues. The Head Circulation Librarian, or other designated individual, will be responsible for overseeing and implementing the cooperative borrowing agreement.

Potential participants will be screened by the Latin American Studies Center at the home institution. An application specifying the individual’s name, mailing address, university status, library borrowing status, and period for which use is requested, will serve as a letter of introduction and will be issued and signed by an authorized staff member of the Latin American Studies Center at the home institution. The individual will present this application at the Library of the lending institution at the place and time period specified on the application, in order to activate privileges. A separate application will be required for each library from which privileges are requested.

The normal period of privileges will be the current semester for undergraduates, the current academic year for graduate students, and the current plus subsequent academic year for faculty. A new letter of introduction from the Latin American Studies Center at the home institution will be required after privileges have expired.

Return to top


Brown University Library

The Brown University Library, with a collection of three million volumes, is a composite of four separate facilities, of which two house collections that provide instructional and research support for Latin American Studies.  These two are the John D. Rockefeller, Jr. Library which houses the circulating collections of materials in the humanities and social sciences.  The Latin American collection includes over 18,000 volumes, 138 serials, 4 newspapers, and 500 microformatted materials.  Subject strengths of the collection are history, language, and literature with country emphasis on Brazil.  The John Hay Library houses non-circulating special collections.  Information on the Library's holdings is available through the online catalog.

Also located on campus, but administered separately, is the John Carter Brown Library, which contains one of the world's outstanding collections in the field of Americana.   The collection contains over 50,000 items including books, maps, and manuscripts describing the discovery, exploration, settlement, and growth of the European colonies in the New World from 1492-1835.
 

Memberships
Boston Library Consortium
Latin American North East Libraries Consortium (LANE)
 
Selective Inventory of Resources
  • Current Journals
  • Most current newspapers and periodicals in the social sciences and humanities are shelved in call number order in the Periodicals Reading Room of the Rockefeller Library.  Bound volumes of periodicals are shelved in the stacks by call number.  For further bibliographic details regarding titles listed below and information on additional serial titles, please consult the Brown Online catalog.

    Americas  v. 1-; (1949-)/[microfilm] v. 29-; (1977-)
    Atenea  1972-
    Aztlan  v. 9-; (1978-)/[microfilm] v. 8, 10-18; (1977, 1979-1987)
    Bohemia de Puerto Rico  v. 66-72; (1974-1980) [latest six months only, v. 73-]
    Boletin de la Biblioteca de Menedez y Pelayo  no. 15-; (1933-) [lacks: 51]
    Boletin del Instituto de Investigaciones Bibliograficas  t. 1-; (1969-)
    Brasil/Brazil  v. 1-; (1988-)
    Bulletin of Hispanic Studies  v. 26-43, 45-; (1949-66, 1968-)
    Bulletin of Latin American Research  v. 8, no. 1-; (1989-)
    Cadernos de Folclore  n.s. 1-; (1975-)
    Caribbean Geography  v. 1, no. 1; (May 1983-)
    Caribbean Quarterly  v. 1-; (1949-)
    Caribbean Studies  v. 1-; (1961-)
    Casa de las Americas  no. 1-; (1960-) [lacks: no. 86-88, 93, 97-99, 101, 103-108]
    Cepal Review  no. 1-; (1976-)
    Colegios: The Newsletter on the History of Ideas in Colonial Latin America [latest three years only]
    Colonial Latin American Review  v. 4-; (1995-)
    Cuadernos Americanos  v. 1-266; (1987-)
    Cuadernos Hispanoamericanos  v. 1-; (1948-)
    Cuban Studies/Estudios Cubanos  v. 5-; (Jan. 1975-) {lacks: v. 6; v. 7, no. 2; v. 9; v. 10, no. 2]
    Dieciocho  v. 1-; (1978-)
    Discurso: Revista de Estudios Iberoamericanos  v. 10, no. 2-; (1933-)
    Estadistica  v. 1-; (1943-)
    Estudios Demograficos y Urbanos  v. 6-; (1991-)
    Estudos Portugeses e Africanos  no. 1-; (Mar. 1983-)
    Estudos  n. 1-; (May 1984-)
    Explicacion de Textos Literarios  v. 1-; (1972-)
    Fem  17-;  (1993-)
    Filologia  v. 10-; (1964-)
    Granma  [current month only] ; microfilm, 1970-
    Hispamerica  v. 1-; (1972-)
    Hispanic American Historical Review  v. 1-; (1918-)/[microfilm] v. 57-; (1977-)
    Hispanic Journal  v. 2, no. 1-; (Fall 1980-)
    Historia Mexicana  v. 1-; (1951-)
    Ibero-Americana Pragenista  v. 1-; (1967-)
    Iberomania  n.f. 4, 7-; (1976, 1978-)
    Inti  no. 1-; (Nov. 1974-)
    Iris/Centre de Recherches sur les Literatures Iberiques et Ibero-Americaines Modernes  no. 1-; (1981-)
    Istoe [Isto e Senhor]  no. 982-; (July 11, 1988-)
    Journal of Afro-Latin American Studies and Literatures  v. 1-; (Fall 1993/1994-)
    Journal of Interamerican Studies and World Affairs  v. 12-; (1970-)/[microfilm] v. 19-; (1977-)
    Journal of Latin American Lore  v. 1-; (1975-)
    Journal of Latin American Studies  v. 1-; (1969-)
    La Gaceta: Publicacion del Fondo de Cultura Economica  1964-
    La Palabra y El Hombre  n.s. 27-; (1978-)
    Lateinamerika  1981-
    Latin America Regional Reports  1983-
    Latin America Weekly Report  (Jan. 4, 1990-)
    Latin American Literary Review  v. 1-; (1972-)
    Latin American Perspectives  v. 1-; (1974-) [lacks v. 1, no. 1, 3; v. 2, no. 2; v. 4, no. 1, 2, 4; v. 6, no. 6]
    Latin American Research Review  v. 1-; (1965-)/[microfilm] v. 12-; (1977-)
    Latin American Theatre Review  v. 1-; (1967-)
    Letras de Hoje  1967-
    Letras  no. 1-; (Mar. 1981-)
    Luso-Brazilan Review  v. 1-; (1964-)
    Manchete  [latest three months only retained]
    Mexican Studies/Estudios Mexicanos  v. 1, no. 1-; (Winter 1985-)
    Nawpa Pacha  v. 1-; (1963-)
    Nexos  v. 13-; (1990-)
    Notas de Poblacion  año 9-; (1981-)
    Novos Estudos Cebrap  no. 11-; (1985-)
    Nuevo Texto Critico  v. 6-7, 11-; (1990/91-)
    Portugese Studies  v. 1-; (1985-)
    Proceso  [latest three months only]
    Quaderni Ibero-Americani  v. 7-; (1948-)
    Razon y Fe: Revista Hispano-Americana de Cultura  v. 1-; (1901-)
    Remate de Males  v. 3-; (1984-) [lacks: 4-5]
    Resgate  1990-
    Resumenes Sobre Poblacion en America Latina/Latin American Population Abstracts  v. 8, no. 1-; (1984-)
    Review: Latin American Literature and Arts  v. 37-; (Jan.-June 1987-)
    Revista Brasileira de Literatura Comparada  v. 1-; (1991-)
    Revista Brasileira de Politica Internacional  v. 1-; (1958-)
    Revista Caoniana  v. 2, p. 1; 2. ser., v. 1-; (1965, 1978-)
    Revista de Historia de America  v. 1-; (1938-)
    Revista de Indias  v. 6-; (1945-)
    Revista de la Biblioteca Nacional Jose Marti  Ser. 2, t. 1, no. 3-; (May 1950-) [lacks ser. 2, t. 4, no. 2-4; t. 5, no. 1-2, 4; t. 9, no. 2-4; ser. 3, t. 6, no. 2; t. 13, no. 1, 4; t. 20, no. 1; t. 26, no. 3-4; t. 27, no. 1]
    Revista Hispanica Moderna  año 1-; (Oct. 1934-)
    Revista Iberoamericana  v. 1-; (1939-)
    Revista Interamericana de Bibliografia/Review of Inter-American Bibliography  v. 1-; (1951-)
    Revista Mexicana de Sociologia  v. 15-; (1953-)
    Siempre! Presencia de Mexico   [current six months only]
    Studies in Latin American Popular Culture  v. 1-2, 4-; (1982-83, 1985-)
    Tempo Brasileiro  no. 1-12; 48-; (1962-1966; 1977-) [lacks: no. 50]
    Thesaurus: Boletin del Instituto Caro y Cuervo  t. 10-; (1954-)
    Traducao & Comunicao  v. 1-; (Dec. 1981-) [lacks: v. 2]
    Travessia  no. 1-; (2nd semester, 1980-)
    La Torre: Revista General de la Universidad de Puerto Rico  v. 1-;  (1953-)
    Universidad de la Habana  v. 1-; (1934-)
    Universidad de Mexico  no. 409-; (Feb. 1985-)
    Veja  no. 352-; (June 4, 1975-) [lacks: 370, 460, 585, 593, 604-605, 607, 623, 626, 629-678, 702, 813, 872]
    Vuelta  no. 38-; (1980-)
     

    Special Collections in the John Hay Library
    Six special collections, housed in the John Hay Library, supplement the general holdings on Latin America. These collections are non-circulating.  Registration at the Hay Reader's Services Desk is required.

    The Church Collection consists of the personal library of Colonel George Earl Church, an engineer and explorer in South America.  Acquired in 1912, it contains 3,500 volumes of economic, historical, geographic, and descriptive studies of  South America.  Perhaps the most important item in the collection is the 18th century manuscript history of Potosi, a Bolivian mining town, once the largest city in the New World.  The greatest concentration of the collection, however, is late 18th and 19th century works  on politics, history, and science.  Materials on anthropology and Native American languages are also well represented.
     

    The Harris Collection of American Poetry and Plays numbers over 200,000 volumes in all.  This collection contains many titles by and about Latin American poets and playwrights and their works.  More recent collecting, however, has shifted emphasis to titles by and about Hispanic-Americans.

    The John Hay Manuscript Collection contains papers, books, manuscripts related to United States political and economic involvement in Latin America during John Hay's tenure as Secretary of  State.

    The Anne S. K. Brown Military Collection contains works on the military history of each country in Latin America. The printed material is supplemented by many original watercolors depicting military events and regimented costume.

    The Incunabula Collection is part of the Annmary Brown Memorial Collection and contains two works published by Juan Pablos, the first printer in the New World.  These works are  Gerson, Jeannes, 1363-1429, Tripartito ... de Doctrina Christiana, [Tenuchtitlan, 1554] and Tenuxtitla, Mexico. Archdiocese. Constituciones del Arcobispado ..., [Mexico, 1556].
     

    Microform Collections
    Blacks in Brazil.  54 items (Princeton University Latin American Pamphlet Collection)
    Black Press of Brazil = A Imprena negra no Brasil.  31 titles spanning 1916-1969 filmed in Sao Paulo (Princeton University Latin American Pamphlet Collection).
    Brazil's Popular Groups.  A collection of materials issued by socio-political, religious, labor, and minority grass-roots organizations.  Section on Blacks, Political Parties, Urban Issues, Children, and Women's Issues. Own sets for:   1966-1986;  1987-1989;  Suppl. 2, 1990-1992;  Suppl. 3, 1993;  Suppl. 4, 1994.
    Latin American Pamphlets from the Yale University Library.  Miscellaneous.  Brazil.  Fiche 1-127.
    Latin American Pamphlets from the Yale University Library.  Miscellaneous.  Cuba.  Fiche 1-46.
    Latin America, Special Studies Series,   1962-1980;  1980-1982;  1982-1985;  1985-1988;  1989-1991.
    Medina's Biblioteca Hispano-Americana.  Microfilm made in 1941 of the original Medina Collection located in the Biblioteca Nacional de Santiago de Chile.  Based on Medina's bibliography, the collection is a history of the Spanish-speaking peoples of the western hemisphere.  The collection includes approximately 8,000 titles.  An index is available.  Film collection is located in both the Rockefeller Library and the John Hay Library.
    Racial Groups in Brazil.  Pamphlets and periodicals. (Princeton University Latin American Pamphlet Collection).
    U. S. Foreign Broadcast Information Service.  (FBIS).  Daily Report, Latin America and Western Europe.
    U. S. State Department.  Confidential Central Files.  Internal Affairs, Cuba, 1955-1959.
     
    Policies and Procedures
    Access to Materials
    Because of the demands placed on library resources, access to and use of the collections in the Rockefeller Library is generally restricted to individuals affiliated with Brown University.  However, researchers and scholars from outside the University may obtain reading or borrowing privileges under special guidelines. Contact the Circulation Office at (401) 863-2165, from 9:00 a.m. - 5:00 p.m. weekdays for details.  Faculty and students of the Latin American Studies consortium receive reading and borrowing privileges through the Consortium Reciprocal Borrowing Agreement.

    Rockefeller Library Hours or call (401) 863-2165.
    The John Hay Library is open Monday-Friday, 9:00 a.m. - 5:00 p.m.  Call for information on recess hours (401) 863-3723.
    For hours at the John Carter Brown library call (401) 863-2725.

    Public Services
    Reference
    The Reference Desk in the Rockefeller Library is located on Level 1 straight ahead from the library entrance. Librarians are on duty the majority of Library hours.  More specialized reference collections and services are offered in the John Hay Library and the John Carter Brown Library.

    Photocopies
    Self service photocopy machines are located in the Copy Center on Level B and in the Reserve Book Room on level 2 of the Rockefeller Library.

    Electronic Resources
    For information on current electronic and Internet resources contact the Reference Desk at (401)-863-2167 or visit the Library's Web page.

    Return to top


    University of Connecticut Libraries
     
    The core collection of Latin American materials in the Homer Babbidge Library at the University of Connecticut supports undergraduate and graduate teaching and research at the University.  It contains approximately 100,000 volumes covering all countries of Latin America and the Caribbean and grows by an estimated 2500 volumes per year.  Materials are collected primarily in literature, history, and the social sciences, with particular emphasis on Mexico, Argentina, Chile, the Andean region, and the Spanish speaking Caribbean.  Specialized collections for Puerto Rico, Chile, and Mexico as well as a Latin American Newspapers collection strongest for Bolivia are housed in the Archives & Special Collections Department of the Thomas J. Dodd Research Center.  The Map and Geographic Information Center (MAGIC)  actively collects flat maps for many countries in Latin America.  Collecting has been continuous since the late 1940s and became an official part of the Library's acquisitions program in 1966 with the establishment of Latin American studies on campus.

    The Latin American materials are not housed together but are integrated into the Library collections by subject classification number.  Access to information on virtually all the Library's holdings for Latin American Studies (including specialized collections, microform sets, maps, etc.) is available through the Library's online catalog, HOMER, or Telnet:  HOMER tn3270://uconnvm.uconn.edu or through any UConn Mainframe account (choose "B" from the VTAM menu).  Audio and video tapes are housed in the Culpeper Media Library.  A separate annotated listing of videotapes to support Latin American Studies is available from the Library or through the Library's Resources for Latin American Studies page.  The University of Connecticut is a depository library for U.S. federal government documents.  Most U.S. government documents are shelved by SUDOC number on Level 2 or in the microfiche collection on Level 1.  Most paper documents circulate.  Documents for foreign countries and of international organizations are selectively available in paper in the Reference and circulating collections as well as more extensively available through the IIS microfiche collection.  For access information for the IIS microfiche see the listing in the microform section for UConn.
     

    Memberships
    ARL Latin Americanists Research Pilot Project
     A table of contents current awareness database for serials in the project can be accessed at UT-LANIC.  Inter-library loan document delivery can be requested directly from the database.
    Latin American Microform Project (LAMP)
    Latin American North East Libraries Consortium (LANE)

     

    Selective Inventory of Resources
    Journals
    For further bibliographic details regarding the titles on this list, please consult Homer, the
    UConn online catalog.
     
    Newspapers
    The Library does not subscribe to any daily newspapers from Latin America.  However, virtually every country in Latin America now has at least one daily newspaper available full-text on the Internet.  Many of these newspapers are accessible at a number of web sites including UT-LANIC and Zona Latina.
     
    Electronic Resources
    The Library continually expands and improves its electronic database offerings.  Contact the Reference Desk at (860)-486-2513 or check the Library Web home page.  The following is a selective listing of electronic databases that are available as of Spring 1999 at UConn:

    Hispanic American Periodicals Index (HAPI)
    Handbook of Latin American Studies (HLAS)
    Latin American Data Base (LADB) (full-text)
    Latin American News
    Info Latino America
    South American Business Information
    Academic Universe (Lexis/Nexis) (full-text)
    America: History and Life
    eHRAF Collection of Ethnography
    ECONLIT
    EIU: Country Analysis
    Eventline
    FirstSearch  (including WorldCat)
    Historical Abstracts
    IAC InfoTrak Search Bank (full-text)
    JREF (includes such indexes as Social Science Index, Education Index, etc.)
    MLA Bibliography
    National Trade Databank
    Public Affairs Information Service (PAIS)
    Public Opinion Poll
    POPLINE
    SIRS Reseacher
    Sociological Abstracts (formerly known as Sociofile)
    UnCover
    UnCover Reveal
    World News Connection (FBIS full-text online)
    WorldCat

    Several of these databases are networked distributed through the Internet (some are available to UConn students and faculty only).
     

    Special Collections
    The Hispanic History and Culture Collections listed below are serviced by the Archives & Special Collections Department and housed in the Thomas J. Dodd Research Center located just south of the Main Library.  Current hours are available from the Dodd Center web page, or call (860)-486-2524.  To use materials registration is required at the Dodd Reader's Services Desk.

    The Chile Collection.  The approximately 2000 volumes of the collection reflect the history and politics of Chile from the sixteenth century through 1940 with particular strength in the years 1810-1940.  The nucleus of the collection was formed by Jose Promis of Santiago.  Subjects include the boundary disputes of Chile, particularly the Tacna-Arica question, as well as church history with a concentration on the Jesuits in Chile.  The history of Chilean politics is well represented by both comprehensive political overviews and more specific materials such as the presidential messages to Congress of presidents of the period.  Parts of the collection focus on economic and agrarian reform, the copper and nitrate industries, and the overall national economy.

     
    Latin American Newspapers This collection consists of over 3000 titles from virtually all countries of Latin America and the Caribbean.  Most of the newspapers date from the 19th century with the collection being strongest for Bolivian titles.  Visit the web exhibition "Paseo por el Periodismo" for highlights of this collection.
     
    The Medina Collection  consists of over 300 volumes of the bibliographical and historical works of the Chilean scholar and bibliographer Jose Toribio Medina (1852-1930) as well as secondary works about him. Medina documented the history of the products of the press of a large number of Latin American countries. He published biographical dictionaries with thousands of entries as well as multi-volumes bibliographies. He also chronicled the history of the Inquisition in Latin America.  Virtually all of his works in the collection are first editions; a number of them are rare.
     
    Mexico is represented by approximately 300 Mexican broadsides and manuscripts consisting mainly of governmental decrees, proclamations and circulars from the first half of the nineteenth century.  This collection includes documents on such subjects as the economy, farming, elections, and military and ecclesiastical communications.  Also included is a manuscript hacienda account book of the Marquesa de Apartado from 1850.  The department also has a number of monographs and pamphlets on Mexican history, politics, and description and travel, almost all 19th century imprints.  There is also a small collection of Mexican codices in facsimile which record the history of early Indian civilizations in Mexico.
     
    The Puerto Rican Collection numbers more than 2000 volumes, containing books, pamphlets, government documents, and some periodicals on the social, economic, political, and literary history of Puerto Rico during the late 19th and early 20th centuries.  While the earlier materials deal more with the socio-historical evolution of Puerto Rico, the later items focus on the island's social and economic conditions.
     
    Spanish Periodicals and Newspapers.  Collected by the Duque de T'Serclaes, the collection spans three centuries.  The bulk of the material covers the years 1800-1840, providing a wealth of opportunities for research on almost all aspects of life in the Spanish colonies including the Wars of Independence for Latin America as viewed in the Spanish press.  The periodicals and newspapers are abundant with information about all aspects of Spanish society including politics and government, history, literature, science, the arts, religion, the economy, and trade. Visit the web exhibition "Paseo por el Periodismo" for highlights of this collection.
     
    Another related collection housed in the Dodd Center which offers research opportunities for Latin American Studies is the Alternative Press Collection (APC).  The APC consists of monographs, journals, and ephemeral materials, dating from the late 1960s to the present.  It includes coverage of contemporary political, social, and economic issues in Latin America, particularly discussion of those issues by members of activist groups in the United States.
     
    Microform Serials and Collections
    A complete list of microform holdings including locations and finding aid information.
     
    Policies and Procedures
     General
    The Storrs campus libraries consists of the Homer Babbidge Library, which is the main library, the Thomas J. Dodd Research Center, housing Archives & Special Collections Department,  the Music Library, and the Pharmacy Library.  The Babbidge Library is located in the center of campus on Farifield Road.  Present holdings include over 2.5 million books, periodicals, government documents, audio-visual materials, and 2 million microform units.
     
    The Babbidge Library houses the bulk of the Latin American collection.  The Circulation Department, Reference Department, access to most electronic resources, and the microtext collection are located on Level 1.  The office of the Interim Latin American Librarian is also located on B Level (Phone: 860-486-2520 or e-mail Peter Allision).  Journals are alphabetically arranged by title and shelved on the Level 3.

     Access to materials
    The Libraries at the University of Connecticut are open to the public for reading and consultation.
    Borrowing privileges are extended to students, faculty, and staff upon presentation of a valid University ID.  Connecticut residents outside the University can become Community Borrowers.   Faculty and students of the Latin American Studies consortium receive borrowing privileges according to the Consortium Reciprocal Borrowing Agreement.
     
     Babbidge Library hours   Call (860) 486-4636 for information about changes in hours.
     
    Bibliographic access to the materials in the University of Connecticut Libraries is available through  the Library's online catalog, HOMER, or Telnet:  HOMER tn3270://uconnvm.uconn.edu or through any UConn Mainframe account (choose "B" from the VTAM menu).
     
    Public Services
    Reference
    Staff are on duty on the Information Desk whenever the building is open for service.  Reference librarians are on duty at the Reference Desk all hours except 8:00-9:00 a.m. and 10:00 p.m. - midnight.  Call the Reference Desk at (860) 486-2513, or visit "askHomer?"  from the Library website.
     
    Electronic Databases
    Most electronic databases (both indexes and full-text) are accessible through a variety of user interfaces on Level 1.  The Library also provides 20 workstations offering public access to the World Wide Web.  Many of the electronic databases provided by the University of Connecticut are also accessible through the Internet at your home or office workstation.  For details consult "Technical Assistance", or call (860) 486-2513.

    Photocopying
    There are self-service copiers on Level A,  Level 1, and Level 3.  Copy card machines are located on all of these levels except Levels A and B.  Change is available at the Copy Center Desk on Level 3 now located in the Culpeper Media Library.
     
    Microform Readers
    Microform Reader-Printers are available on Level 1 next to the Microtext collections.  Prints may be made with a copy card that can be purchased at any of the copy machine locations listed above.
     
    Electronic Course Reserve
    Working with a variety of faculty, the Library has started to provide reserve materials over the campus network.   Additional electronic course reserve materials can be accessed through the University's Virtual Classroom.   Connect to these sites to verify if your class reserve materials are available electronically.
     
    Interlibrary Loan
    The Library will supply materials from its collection through interlibrary loan.  Inquire at your campus library for information.
     
    Return to top


    The W.E.B. Du Bois Library
     University of Massachusetts/Amherst
     
    The Latin American Collection of the University of Massachusetts/Amherst Library numbers an estimated 170,000 volumes, with an additional 37,500 units in microform and around 1,000 serials currently received. In the years when the University has average budgets it grows at a rate of from 3,000 to 3,500 volumes a year.  Approximately 80% of the collection is in Spanish or Portuguese.  The Collection dates back about thirty-five years, with an organized, committed acquisitions program beginning about 1965 when the University's Latin American Studies Program was established.
     
    The Latin American holdings are not housed as a separate collection, but are integrated in the Library according to where they fall in the classification system.  Some holdings, including the maps, are in the branch libraries.  Documentary films are in the Audio Visual Department (A guide, Five College Latin American Films and Videos, is available from the Library).  There is no separate catalog or index to the Latin American Collection as a whole.  Information on the Library's holdings is available through the online catalog.

    Within the framework of a "Profile," the Library collects across the board for the Humanities and Social Sciences, selectively for the Natural Sciences.  It has been the policy since 1965 to emphasize no one subject or geographical area, but to collect for all subjects and areas.  The difficulties agents have in acquiring publications in some locations, the research interests of faculty members, the kinds of courses offered, and other factors have caused the collections for some countries to develop more rapidly than those for others.  The strongest portion is that for Argentina, which was already well established at the time the Latin American Studies Program was formally launched.  Other important parts of the collection are those for Mexico, Peru, and Colombia.  Brazil also shows an emerging strength.  The subjects best represented in the collection are Literature, History, Anthropology, Politics and Government, Economics, Demography and Geography.  There is also a rapidly growing body of material on Latin American women.  The Library has a considerable number of Latin American newspapers on microfilm, an expanding collection of Latin American government documents, and an extensive, up-to-date Reference collection.
     

    Memberships
    Consortia to which the University Library belongs which are important for Latin American Studies include:
    Five Colleges, Inc.
    The University's students and faculty may use the libraries of the other four colleges as readily as they use their own.  There is an online catalog of all the Five College library holdings which may be accessed off campus via the Internet.
     The University of Massachusetts Library has the largest holdings of Latin American material in the area, but the colleges have good basic collections and some significant special groups of publications.  Smith College, for example, is strong for Brazilian Literature, Hampshire College for publications of the English-speaking Caribbean and for films.  Mount Holyoke has many Latin American novels of the earlier twentieth century, and Amherst has a useful collection of Venezuelan material.
    Center for Research Libraries (CRL)
    Latin American Microform Project (LAMP)
    Latin American North East Libraries Consortium (LANE)
    Boston Library Consortium
     
    Selective Inventory of Resources
    Journals
    The University receives about 580 Latin American Journals currently (excluding a number of serial
    documents, which are handled separately).  The UMass current journals are not listed here.  Please consult the UMass online catalog for specific titles.
     
    Over the years the University has acquired substantial holdings of Latin American serials no longer published, some of these in microform.  A few examples:  film of paper editions of many of the 54 journals -- among the most important published in Latin American in the century 1843-1935 -- indexed by Sturgis Leavitt in Revistas Hispanoamericanas, Indice Bibliográfico, 1843-1935 (Santiago, Chile 1960), the 37 titles issued to date in the series of reprints of Mexican literary journals of the first part of the twentieth century, Revistas Literarias Mexicanas Modernas (made available by the Fondo de Cultura Economica, Mexico), and film of a number of Cuban journals produced by the Kraus Thompson Organization in the mid-1970's.
     
    Special Collections
    The University of Massachusetts'  Special Collection and Archives collection houses an assortment of materials including manuscripts, atlases, maps, 1st editions, and rare volumes of literature of Latin America.  Included in the manuscript collections are recently acquired papers of Robert Potash pertaining to the military and political movements of Argentina from the 1940s to the 1970s.  Only a portion of the Robert Potash papers are currently available for viewing, including photocopies of government publications, newspaper clippings, and articles from Argentina from the 1940s to the 1970s.
     
    Newspapers
    The Library has current paper subscriptions to nine (9) Latin American newspapers and current microfilm subscriptions to an additional six.  The collection also has backfiles on microfilm of a number of newspapers not currently received.
     
    Current newspapers in paper edition are on the newspaper shelves in the Current Periodical Room (2nd Floor).  Backfiles on film are in the Microforms Room (Main Floor).
     
    Almost no Latin American newspapers are indexed.  In order to find articles in them, one must identify the dates when the events occurred through the New York Times or other English language index, or through one or another summary of news stories.
     
    ARGENTINA
    La Nación.  Weekly international ed.  Paper.  The weekly literary supplement is also received in paper. Current issues only.  (Current)
    Non-Current:
    Clarín.  Film Sept. 1962 - Dec. 1981.  (Microfilm A 907)
    La Época.  Film 1915-1930. (Microfilm A 259)
    El Independiente. 1815-1816; Los Amigos de la patria y la juventud, 1815-1816 (Microfilm 5021)
    La Nación (daily)  Film 1957-88 [1991]  (Microfilm A 90)
    Periódicos de la época de la Revolución de Mayo:  El Grito del sud, 1812-1813;
    La Prensa.  Film 1869 to 1993.  (Microfilm A2)
    Vanguardia.  Film 1894-1987.  (Microfilm A 224)
     
    BARBADOS
    Times.  Film 1881-Sept. 1895.  (Microfilm A 859)  (Non-Current)
     
    BRAZIL
    Non-Current:
    O Estado de Sao Paulo.  Film 1875-[1956]-[1973-1974]-[1976]-1989.  (Microfilm A 301)
    Correio de Manha.  Film 1962-[1966]-1974.  (Microfilm A 130)
    Opiniao (Rio).  Film Oct. 23, 1972-April 4, 1977.  (Microfilm A 825)
    Rio News.  Film 1879-1900.  (Microfilm A 864). Publication suspended Dec. 6, 1893-Jan. 1, 1895.
     
    CHILE
    El Mercurio.  Film 1956-[1959]-[1983]-April 1988.  (Microfilm A 145) (Non-Current)
     
    COLOMBIA
    El Tiempo.  Film 1930-1960, 1971 to the present.  (Microfilm A 406).
                       Suspended publication Aug. 1954-May 1957.  (Current)
    Non-Current:
    Alternativa.  Bogota, 1974-Mar. 27, 1980.  (Microfilm A 826)
    Nueva frontera.  1974-[1981]-[1989]-[1991].  (AP 63 N76 Folio)
     
    COSTA RICA
    Rumbo (San Jose, Costa Rica).  Paper.  Sept. 14, 1987 to the present [contains gaps].
                 (AP 63 R963 Per)  (Current)
     
    CUBA
    Granma.  Weekly edition in English.  Paper.  Current issues only.  Film 1966 to the present.  Filmed incomplete.  (Microfilm A 204).  (Note:  Film is called Granma Weekly Review).  (Current)
    Non-Current:
    Noticias de hoy.  Film 1959-Oct. 1965 (Microfilm A 919).  Merged with Revolución to form Granma.
    Revolución.   Film 1959-Oct. 3, 1965.  (Microfilm A 920)
    Verde Olivio. Film 1960-1987.  (Microfilm A 656)
     
    DOMINICAN REPUBLIC
    Caribe.  Paper.  Current issues only.  (Current)
    Caribe.  Film 1948-[1965]-1987.  (Microfilm A 150)  (Non-Current)
     
    HAITI
    Le Petit samedi soir. Film 1972-1980.  (Microfilm A 846)  (Non-Current)
     
    MEXICO
    Excelsior.  Film.  1918-[1920]-[1922]-[1971]-[1979]-1985, 1990 to the present.
    Uno más uno.  Paper edition.  Current issues only.
    Non-Current:
    Águila mexicana; periódico cuatidiano político y literario. Film 1823-1828.  (Microfilm A 227)
    El Cosmopólita.  Film Dec. 1835-July 1843.  (Microfilm A 226).  Some issues lacking.
    El Observador de la República Mexicana.  Film. June 6, 1827-Jan. 2, 1828;  Ser. 2, March 3-Oct. 27, 1830 (some issues lacking).
    El Siglo Diez y Nueve.  Film.  Oct. 8, 1841-Dec. 1896.  (Microfilm A 325). Suspended publication Jan. 16-Mar. 1, 1843; Jan. 1, 1846, May 30, 1846, Sept. 13-30, 1856; Aug. 1, 1858-Jan. 14, 1861; May 15, 1863-July 14, 1867.
    El Sol.  Film.  Dec. 5, 1821-May 22, 1822; June 15, 1824-March 1830.  (Microfilm A 221)
    Suspended publication Dec. 2, 1828-June 30, 1829.  Some issues lacking.
    El Telégrafo; periódico oficial del gobierno de los Estados-Unidos Mexicanos.  Film.  Jan 11, 1833-Feb. 9, 1835.  (Microfilm A 22).
    La Lima.  (Earlier title:  La Lima de vulcano).  Film.  Oct. 19, 1833-   Dec. 1, 1837.  (Microfilm A 278). Some issues lacking.
    Periodísmo insurgente.  Mexico:  PRI, 1976.  3 vols.  (F 1232 P46+).  Photo reprint edition consisting of facsimiles of ten Mexican revolutionary newspapers published in the period 1810-1823.
    Volume 1:  contains El despertador americano, Ilustrador nacional, Ilustrador americano, Seminario patriótico-americano, Gazeta del gobierno americano en el departamento del norte, Clamores de la fidelidad americana contra la opresión, Impresos y manifesto de Don José Matias Quintana.
    Volume 2:  contains Correo americano del sur and Sud; continuación del Despertador de Michoacan.
    Volume 3:  contains La Abispa de Chilpancingo.
     
    NICARAGUA
    La Barricada.   (daily).  Film. 1979 to1991-.  (filmed incomplete.)  (Microfilm A 841).         (Current).
    La Barricada Internacional.  English language.  Film. 1987, [1989]-[1991]. Microfilm A 1021)  This is not a translation of the newspaper above; it is a separate publication.
     
    PERU
    El Comercio.  Film.  1925-1945, 1974 to the present.  (Microfilm A 737)  (Current).
    Lima Times.  1977 to the present.  (AP 6 L5 Per).  Paper.  Supersedes Peruvian Times.  Back volumes in  stacks.  (contains gaps).  (Current)
    Andean Air Mail and Peruvian Times.  Film.  Dec. 24, 1940-Sept. 28, 1973. (Microfilm A 1047)  (Non-Current)
     
    PUERTO RICO
    El Nuevo Día.   Paper.  Current issues only.  (Current)
     
    EL SALVADOR
    El Diario de hoy.  Film.  1936-1955.  (Microfilm A 151)  (Non-Current)
     
    URUGUAY
    La Marcha.  Film.  1-36, 1939-1974.  (Microfilm A 699)  (Non-Current)
     
    VENEZUELA
    El Nacional.  Film.  1966-[1969]-[1972-June 1980].  (Microfilm A 156)  (Non-Current)
     
    Government Documents
    The University of Massachusetts Library is a depository library.  Most U.S. government documents are shelved by Superintendent of Documents number in the Government Documents Department on the sixth level of the library.  (There is a catalog of holdings on that level.)  Most items circulate.  The Government Documents Department also receives the United Nations documents.  Other UN documents are shelved in the Documents collection, but most of the publications of the Economic Commission for Latin America (CEPAL) are catalogued for the general collection.
    Microform Collections
    Among the large number of U.S. government document related to Latin America are several important groups in microform.
     
    Joint Publications Research Service (JPRS) (Located in Government Documents Dept.)
    1957 to the present with indexes.
     
    U.S. Foreign Broadcast Information Service. (FBIS)
    Daily Report, Latin America.  (Located in Government Documents Dept.)  Microfiche:  1974 to the present (PR Ex7.10)  Index 1978-[1983] to the present.
     
    U.S. National Archives Microfilm Publications (Located in the Microforms Room)
    The University Library has extensive holdings of the microfilm of diplomatic and consular dispatches to the State Department from officers in Latin America from the earliest days of the Republic.  Holdings are largely complete through 1929. Later years have been acquired as the film was produced and funds became available.  Interested persons may acquire a complete list of the Library's holdings from the Latin American Librarian.
     
    Other U.S. Documents in Microform
    (All microfilm in the Microforms Room; paper guides in the Reference Collection).
     
    CIA Research Reports:  Latin America.  1946-1976 (Microfilm 6539; Guide Ref. Z 1601 C51982)
     
    John F. Kennedy National Security Files.  Latin American National Security Files, 1961-1962   (Microfilm 8446; Guide Ref Z1249.M5 G97 1987)
     
    Latin America:  Special Studies
    1962-80 (Microfilm 6537; Guide Ref. Z 1601 L3)
    1980-82 (Microfilm 6538; Guide, Ref. Z 1601 L31)
     
    Lyndon B. Johnson National Security Files.  Latin America 1963-1969.  (Microfilm 8447; Guide Ref Z1249.M5 G975 1972)
     
    OSS/State Department Intelligence and Research Reports:  Part 14:  Latin America 1941-1961  (Microfilm 6536; Guide, Ref. Z 1601 G81)
     
    U.S. Military Intelligence Reports.
    Argentina 1918-41  (Microfilm 6559 ; Guide, Ref. Z 1623 U3)
    Mexico 1919-41   (Microfilm 6558 ; Guide, Ref. Z 1426.5 U5)
     
    U.S Department of State.
    Confidential U.S. Diplomatic Post Records:
    Cuba 1938-1945          (Microfilm 6543; Guide, Ref. Z 1511 C6)
    El Salvador 1930-45     (Microfilm 6541; Guide, Ref. Z 1491 C6)
    Nicaragua 1930-45       (Microfilm 6540; Guide, Ref. Z 1481 C6)
    Honduras 1930-45        (Microfilm 6542; Guide, Ref. Z 1471 C6)
     
    Foreign  &  International Documents
    Documents of foreign countries and of international organizations other than the UN are not shelved with the Documents Collection, but are fully cataloged and shelved in the stacks or in the Microforms Room.  The Library receives the Official Documents and other publications of the Organization of American States and has complete holdings on microfiche of the Congresses and Conferences held by the old Pan American Union.
     
    Organization of American States.
    Documentos officiales.  Indice y lista general. 1960 the present.  Paper.  (Ref. F 1402 A169)  Issued in 2 parts:  a list of documents, and a subject index.  The First paper appears promptly; the second is often delayed -- sometimes for several years.
     
    Official Records.
    1978 to the present.  Paper.  The various series are catalogued separately.
    1961-1966.  Microcards. (Microcard 7)
    1967 to the present.  Microfiche.  (Microfiche 63)
    The microfiche is kept together by the year.
     
    Pan American Union.
    Conferences and Organizations series.  No. 1-60, 1948-1959.  (Microfiche 66)
    Congress and Conference series.  No. 1-69, 1929-1950.  (Microfiche 65)
     
    The Library also receives many of the publications of the OAS specialized agencies (Pan American Health Organization, Pan American Institute of Geography and History, Inter-American Indian Institute, etc.) and of related but unaffiliated agencies (Inter-American Development Bank, for example).
     
    The collecting policy for Latin American government documents calls for acquiring the most significant publications of the national governments, including those of national autonomous entities (Central Banks, for example).  State and municipal documents are excluded unless the Library asks for them on an individual basis.  Parliamentary debates are acquired from Argentina.  The Library receives the legal codes of Argentina and to some extent those of Brazil, Colombia and Mexico.  And agents in all countries are asked to supply copies of laws that have to do with labor, health, education, welfare, women, children, native populations and agrarian reform.  The Library also collects works that deal with constitutional and legal issues.
     
    Microform sets of Latin American Government documents that supplement for incomplete paper sets have been acquired.  The following are housed in the Microforms Room.
     
    Annual Reports of the World's Central Banks.
    Alexandria, VA:  Chadwyck-Healey.  1986 to the present.  Microfiche 621. Ongoing project.
    Reports for many, but not all, banks of Latin America and the Caribbean are included.
     
    International Population Censuses.  Latin America and the Caribbean.  New Haven: Research Publications.  Microfilm.  Ask at Reference Desk for Major Five College Microforms Index  (p.112-113 for Microfilm numbers).  Library has Segment I (Censuses 1945-1967) - Guide Ref. Z 7164 D3 R47 1979.  Segment II (Censuses Pre-1945) -   Guide Ref. Z 7164 D3 R468 v. 1 & 2.  The library did not purchase Segment III:  Censuses Post-1967.  It owns many of these in paper editions.
     
    Latin American and Caribbean Official Statistical Serials, 1821-1970.  Alexandria, VA: Chadwyck-Healey. Microfiche.  Check online catalog for individual statistical publications.  Somewhat scattered.
     
    National Economic Development Plans.  Zug, Switzerland:  Inter Documentation Company.
    Guide at Ref. Desk. HC 10 I5.  Microfiche 1.  Ongoing project. 355 Latin American and Caribbean development plans are available in this collection as of the end of 1989. These begin with the earliest plans and cover up to the 1980s
     
    Current National Statistical Compendiums on Microfiche. Congressional Information Service, Inc. Groups 1-9, 1970-1988. Microfiche 622. (Standing order canceled at the end of 1989).  Many, but not all, national statistical compendiums for Latin America and the Caribbean are included.
     
    Other Microform Collections
    In addition to the microfrom collections for government documents listed above, the UMass Library holds the following microform collections.
     
    Spain.  Archivo General de Indias, Seville.
    El virreinato de Nueva España y Perú durante los siglos XVI y XVII.
     
    Prof. Lewis Hanke selected and indexed many thousands of documents stored in the Archive of the Indies in Seville having to do with viceregal administration in the colonies during the 16th and 17th centuries, and the Centro Nacional de Microfilm (in Madrid) filmed many of these.  The University of Massachusetts Library has a set of this film.
     
    Hanke, Lewis.  Guía de las fuentes en el Archivo General de Indias para el estudio de la administración virreinal española en México y en el Perú: 1535-1700, Lewis Hanke; con la colaboración de Celso Rodríguez.  Köln; Wien: Böhlau, 1977.  3v.  (Lateinamerikanische Forschungen; Bd. 7)  (Ref. F 1401 L322, Bd. 7)   This guide contains an index to the documents which were filmed and a listing of other documents relating to viceregal administration which were not filmed. The collection of film is divided into eight sub-sections:
     
    Spain.  Archivo General de Indias, Seville.
    El virreinato de Nueva España y Perú durante los siglos XVI y XVII; correspondencia virreinal de la Audencia de Nueva España años 1536-1673.  [Madrid] Centro Nacional de Microfilm, 1975.  51 reels.  35mm.  (Centro Nacional de Microfilm.  Publicaciones en microfilm, no. 60) (Microfilm A 436)
     
    Spain.  Archivo General de Indias, Seville.
    El virreinato de Nueva España y Perú durante los siglos XVI y XVII; correspondencia de virreyes, [Perú], años 1552-1657.  [Madrid] Centro Nacional de Microfilm, 1975. 41 reels.  35mm.  (Centro Nacional de Microfilm.  Publicaciones en microfilm, no. 61) (Microfilm A 437)
     
    Spain.  Archivo General de Indias, Seville.
    El virreinato de Nueva España y Perú durante los siglos XVI y XVII; [registros: virreinato de Nueva España.]  Madrid: Servicio Nacional de Microfilm, 1974.  88 reels.  35 mm.  (Servicio Nacional de Microfilm.  Publicaciones en microfilm, no. 49, 38, 37, 39, 43) (Microfilm A 434)
     
    Spain.  Archivo General de Indias, Seville.
    El virreinato de Nueva España y Perú durante los siglos XVI y XVII; [registros: virreinato de Nueva España.]  Madrid: Servicio Nacional de Microfilm, 1974.  95 reels.  35 mm.  (Servicio Nacional de Microfilm.  Publicaciones en microfilm, no. 41, 44, 50, 54, 45, 46, 47, 48, 55, 51, 52, 53) (Microfilm A 435)
     
    Spain.  Archivo General de Indias, Seville.
    El virreinato de Nueva España y Perú durante los siglos XVI y XVII; [residencias: virreinato de Nueva España.]  Madrid: Centro Nacional de Microfilm, 1975.  68 reels.  35 mm.  (Centro Nacional de Microfilm.  Publicaciones en microfilm, no. 62, 63) (Microfilm A 438)
     
    Spain.  Archivo General de Indias, Seville.
    El virreinato de Nueva España y Perú durante los siglos XVI y XVII; [varios: expedientes y cartas sobre la mita de Postosí y el repartimiento de indios de dicha mita, 1667-1701, y 1582.]  Madrid: Centro Nacional de Microfilm, 1975.  12 reels.  35 mm.  (Centro Nacional de Microfilm.  Publicaciones en microfilm, no. 64) (Microfilm A 439)
     
    Spain.  Archivo General de Indias, Seville.
    El virreinato de Nueva España y Perú durante los siglos XVI y XVII; [varios: reales decretos sobre libranzas, alcabales y arbitrios de real hacienda, 1581-1604.]  Madrid: Centro Nacional de Microfilm, 1976.
    68 reels.  35 mm.  (Centro Nacional de Microfilm.  Publicaciones en microfilm, no. 65) (Microfilm A 440)
     
    The film of the residencias: virreinato de Perú was received later than the other films and was cataloged as follows:
     
    Archivo General de Indias.
    Juicios de residencia, audencia de Lima, años 1549-1617 [microform], Archivo General de Indias, Sección de Justicia, Series 1a, Legajos 481 [i.e., 451]-467.  Madrid: Centro Nacional de Microfilm, 1976
    23 microfilm reels; 35 mm.  (Publicaciones en microfilm.  Centro Nacional de Microfilm, no. 71) (Microfilm A 986)
     
    Latin American pamphlets from the Yale University Library.
    New York, NY: Clearwater, 1985.  (Microfiche 598) 10,500 microfiches; 11 x 15cm. "Selections from 1600-1900" -- Guide.  Indexed in: Guide to Latin American Pamphlets from the Yale University Library.  1985.  (Z1431 Y34 1985)
     
    Great Britain.  Foreign Office.
    Correspondence on Mexico 1919-.  New York: Clearwater Publishing Co., c1979-.  (Microfilm A 988)
    135 microfilm reels covering 1919-1956 received to date.  A continuing project.
     
    Great Britain.  Colonial Office.
    Colonial Reports - annual.  no. 1-1936.  London: H.M. Stationary Office, 1891-1940.
    Microfiche.  New York: Andronicus Publishing Co., 1974.  1318 microfiches.  (Microfiche 473)
    Filmed by country and date, rather than by annual report number.  Includes index to the entire set.
     
    Amnesty International, a major collection of published and unpublished research material.  Zug, Switzerland: Inter Documentation Co., [1981?]  (Microfiche 275)   Includes microfiches of Amnesty International published and unpublished material, updated by annual supplements.  Fiche in vol. 1 preceded by printed catalogue serving as an index by country to fiche in both volumes.  Vol. 2 includes microfiches of published Amnesty International monographs and serials. Includes material on some Latin American and Caribbean countries.
     
    HRAF Microfiles
    New Haven: Human Relations Area Files.
    Microfiches produced by University Microfilm, Ann Arbor, Michigan.  (Set carries no classification number.  It is located in Microforms Room.)  The University has complete holdings of all files produced through 1988.  Financial considerations forced it to cancel its standing order at the end of that year. Cultures of Latin America and the Caribbean are covered in this collection.
     
    Policies and Procedures
    General
    The University Library System consists of the W.E.B. DuBois Library (in the 28-story tower) and branch libraries in the sciences and in music.  Present holdings include more than two million books, periodical, and government documents, and over two million microforms.
     
    The W.E.B. DuBois Library houses most of the holdings in the social sciences and humanities and hence the bulk of the Latin American Collection.  The Circulation Department is on the first floor entrance level. The Office of the Latin American Librarian is in the Collection Development Division on the 4th Floor (Tel. Number (414) 545-0058)  Office hours: Monday - Friday, 8:30 a.m. - 4:30 p.m.  The Online Library Catalog,  periodical indexes and databases, reference and information desks, microforms, and interlibrary loan are all on the Main Floor, one floor down from the entrance level.  Current periodicals and newspapers, and bound periodical backfiles from l990 to the present are shelved on the 2nd floor.  Bound volumes before 1990 are shelved with the books in the stacks.  The law collection is on the 5th floor, and Government Documents (with its own staff and card catalog) is on the 6th floor.  The departments of Archives and Manuscripts and
    Rare Books are on the 25th floor (Monday - Friday 10:00 a.m. - 3:00 p.m.)
     
    University Library Hours or call (414) 545-0414.
    For other information call the Reference Department (413-545-0150), or visit the Library's home page.
     
    Stack Access and Circulation Policies
    The stacks of the Library are open to all users.  Monographs may be borrowed in person by members of the University community with valid I.D. cards and by other members of the Five College community who have Five College photo I.D.'s.  Citizens of the State of Massachusetts may also obtain borrower's cards on presenting proof of identity and residence.  Faculty and students of the Latin American Studies Consortium receive borrowing privileges according to the Consortium Reciprocal Borrowing Agreement. Others may borrow through interlibrary loan (see below).  Journals do not circulate, nor do art and photography books shelved on the 9th floor.
     
    Public Services
    Reference
    Reference librarians are on duty at the Reference and Information Desk on the Main Floor of the W.E.B. DuBois Library whenever the building is open for service, with the exception of hours after 10:00 p.m.  Tel. (413)-545-0150.
     
    Electronic Databases
    Most electronic databases are located on the Main Floor.  The Library has over 50 workstations and will soon be providing public access to the World Wide Web.  For the UMass community, many of the databases are available via the Internet.  Call (413) 545-0150 for more information.
     
    Microform Readers
    Readers-printers for microfilm, microfiche and microcards are located in the Microforms         Room on the Main Floor.  Prints may be made by using a copy card that can be purchased here or by using coins (15c per microfiche print, 25c per microfilm print).
     
    Photocopying
    There are self-service copiers (10c per print) on the Main Floor and Floors 2, 3, 5, 6, 9, and 19.  Copy cards may be purchased for $5.00 or for $10.00 at a vending machine on the Main Floor.  The library does not make change.
     
    Interlibrary Loan
    The Library will supply materials from its collections through interlibrary loan.  Inquire at your campus library about this service.
     
    Return to top


    Yale University Library

    The Latin American Collection at Yale University contains a wealth of research material and offers a variety of research opportunities for Latin American studies. The collecting policy is to acquire the important editorial production in the fields of the humanities and social sciences published in South America, México, Central America and the Caribbean. Within this policy of developing a general, area wide collection, special strengths have resulted from the acquisition of important collections during the past 100 years.

    The basis of the Latin American collections at Yale was established early in the 20th Century with a succession of acquisitions and gifts from Henry Raup Wagner, William S. Beebe, and Hiram Bingham. Wagner and Bingham were Yale alumni whose substantial gifts to Yale included collections rich in 19th century Latin American material. These collections were notable for their historical, political, and economic materials relating to México and Perú. Hiram Bingham, Yale professor of history and curator of Yale's collection of Latin American History from 1908-1930, sold and donated to Yale a collection of Peruvian materials strong in literature, archaeology, anthropology and folklore. His gifts also included the Francisco Pérez de Velasco library of 19th century Peruvian history, and many books from the Peruvian historian, Manuel de Odriozola. Together with the acquisition of part of the select library of Mexican historian Genaro García, all of these acquisitions made Yale's Mexican and Peruvian collections internationally known.

    The library also has an impressive collection of Brazilian materials. The strength of the collection lies in the sizeable numbers of works on Brazilian history, literature, travel accounts, and regional histories. The collection is particularly rich in materials relating to colonial Brazilian history. The James Watson Webb Collection, detailing his service as American Minister to Pedro II's Court in Brazil, and the Percival Farquhar Collection, relating to railroad building and business ventures in Brazil during the first half of the 20th Century, are also part of Yale's Brazilian collection.

    Other collections of major importance at Yale are those representing Argentina, Chile, Cuba and Central America. Argentina is comprehensively represented, especially in early 20th century publications. The collections of Carlos A Tornquist and Davis Curtis DeForest form the basis of Yale's Argentine holdings. The material donated by Tornquist had a strong emphasis on literature, history, oratory, law and sociology. The Chilean collection contains a respectable number of works on Chilean history and literature, covering the period from 1875 to the present. In the late 1960s and 1970s a successful systematic effort was made to build up the Chilean collection. The history of Cuba and Cuban literature are also well represented at Yale. The library has been very successful in acquiring large numbers of Cuban publications during the difficult Castro period. After the Cuban revolution, excellent exchange agreements were established with Cuban libraries, publishers, university presses, and government agencies. These agreements provided the collection with literary publications, serials, government publications, and other research materials. In 1981 the acquisition of the Franco Cerutti Central American Library added more than 10,000 titles to the library. When added to Yale's already considerable Central American holdings, it made Yale a key repository of Central American materials.

    Currently, the collection comprises approximately 400,000 printed volumes, including monographs, serials, newspapers, and government documents, and is growing at a rate of 8,500 volumes a year. It has subscriptions to more than 3,500 Latin American periodicals and monographic series. In addition to printed matter the collection is rich in manuscript material, and it contains a newspaper microfilm collection of 10,000 reels, as well as such non-book materials as photographs, documentary film, sound recordings, sheet maps, musical scores, archaeological artifacts and paintings.

    Although Yale's concentration of Latin American research material is housed in Sterling Memorial Library, there are important collections classified under an old Yale classification scheme and housed in the Seeley Mudd Library. These materials are sometimes referred to as the “Latin American Country Collections”. Apart from the Latin American Collection, sizeable Latin American holdings are also found in the Economic Growth Center Collection, and the Divinity, Law, Social Science and Beinecke Libraries. Smaller collections are found in the Music, Art, Medical and Kline Science Libraries and the Peabody Museum. The Economic Growth Center Collection is unique among collections of its kind in the United States. The collection contains extensive holdings of statistical publications issued by government agencies, private institutions and central banks from every country in Latin America. Social scientists have found this collection to be invaluable in their research on the economic development of Latin America.

    The Curator of the Latin American Collection is available for consultation and provides advanced reference services to students and faculty by appointment. The offices of the collection are located on the 3rd floor of Sterling Memorial Library.
     

    Memberships
    Seminar on the Acquisition of Latin American Library Materials  (SALALM)
    Latin American North East Libraries Consortium (LANE)
    ARL Latin Americanists Research Pilot Project 
    A table of contents current awareness database for serials in the project can be accessed at UT-LANIC.  Inter-library loan document delivery can be requested directly from the database.
    Center for Research Libraries (CRL)
    Latin American Microfilm Project (LAMP)
    Research Library Group (RLG)
     
    Selective Inventory of Resources
    Journals
    The Library has a subscription to over 3,500 Latin American periodicals. The Yale University current journals are not listed here due the large volume. Please consult the ORBIS online catalog for specific titles.
     
    Newspapers
    Yale University has a collection of over 10,000 reels of newspaper microfilm. Listed below is a selection for Latin America.

    ARGENTINA
    La Prensa, 1857; 1869-1951;1956-date, Micro
    Pagina 12, 1987-date, Paper/Micro

    BRAZIL
    Folha de Sao Paulo, 1988 -1995, Paper/Micro
    Jornal do Brasil, 1965 -1989, Paper/Micro
    O Estado de Sao Paulo, 1875-date, Micro

    CHILE
    El Mercurio 1962-date, Micro

    COLUMBIA
    El Tiempo 1962-June 1993, Micro

    COSTA RICA
    La Nacion 1983-date, Micro

    CUBA
    Granma 1965-date, Micro
    Granma Internacional 1966-1977; 1979-1990; 1992, Paper/Micro
    Juventud Rebelde 1984; 1986-1994, Paper/Micro
    Los Trabajadores 1980-date, Paper/Micro

    MEXICO
    El Nacional 1985-1991, Micro
    Excelsior 1918-1985, Micro
    La Jornada 1991-date, Paper/Micro
    Uno mas uno 1980-1991, Micro
    La Reforma 1995-date, Paper

    NICARAGUA
    Barricada July 1979- date, Micro
    El Nuevo Diario 1980-date, Paper/Micro
    La Prensa 1987-date Paper 1965-1970;1978-1986, Micro

    PERU
    El comercio 1894-1912; 1925-date, Micro

    PUERTO RICO
    San Juan Star 1975-1987, Micro, & 1988-date (Paper)

    URUGUAY
    El Dia 1970-1990, Micro
     

    Special Collections
    Following are brief descriptions of special collections in the Yale Library system relating to the study of Latin America:

    Bingham Collections: There are two collections that relate to Hiram Bingham (1875-1956), explorer, professor, curator, senator, and they reflect his lifelong interest in Latin America. This wealth of personal papers includes correspondence, journals, scrapbooks, and manuscripts of his many publications. The Yale Peruvain Expedition Papers contain most of the material on the Peruvian expeditions which Bingham organized and directed as a joint venture between Yale and the National Geographic Society. The Bingham Family Papers contain his research and teaching material on Latin America.

    Franco Cerutti Central American Collection: A collection consisting of over 10,000 Central American imprints on literature, history, civilization, government, general geography, travel, general economic and social conditions, and religious affairs. The majority of the material concerns two countries: Nicaragua and Costa Rica. The rest of the collection emphasizes El Salvador, Honduras, Panama and Belize.

    De Forest Family Papers: In his career as a merchant, privateer and diplomat in the early stages of the Argentine republic, DeForest accumulated eight letterbooks, seven journals or diaries and five account books. These materials constitute a rich source for the commercial and political history of the Rio de la Plata area in the late colonial and revolutionary period.

    De Levis Papers: A unique adjunct to the sources for Caribbean historical research at the Yale Library is the story of the estates in Martinique which figured in an inheritance case brought to court in 1831 by Gaston-Francois-Christophe de Levis. The de Levis family papers cover the entire record of this litigation as well as related matters going back to 1707 and include two maps of the de Levis estates.

    Del Monte Library: A portion of the vast library amassed by the Cuban writer and book collector Domingo Del Monte y Aponte (1804-1853), was purchased by Yale in 1888. This included 160 books and 22 manuscript volumes. Many of the manuscripts are royal and papal decrees from the 17th and 18th centuries regarding Indian affairs.

    Percival Farquhar Papers: The business papers of the American entrepreneur Percival Farquhar (1864-1953), a major figure in the economic development of Brazil in the first half of the 20th century, constitute a useful source for the economic and political history of Brazil and its emergence as a modern state. This material also includes documents relating to railroad construction in Brazil, Guatemala, and Cuba during the first half of the 20th century.

    Henry Hill Papers: Hill a merchant and later on vice-consul to Valparaiso, lived in Chile from 1817 to 1821 during the revolutionary period. The Hill papers document the social and political life in Chile during this turbulent period. The material consists of approximately 1,100 letters and other documents.

    Latin American Pamphlets Collection: This collection comprised of approximately 10,000 items is a priceless resource of material that provides first-hand documentation of the social, political and economic conditions in Latin America. The time range of the collection stretches across four centuries, from the 17th to the early 20th century-although the majority of the papers are from the 19th century. These pamphlets come from the private collections of the following individuals: Hiram Bingham, Henry R. Wagner, Genaro Garcia and Fransico Perez de Velasco. The collection is divided into three sections: “Mexico”, “Peru”, and a “Miscellaneous” section that encompasses Central and South America. A 7 volume “Guide to Latin American Pamphlets from the Yale University Library” is available for easy access to the collection. The guide indexes each section by subject, alphabetically by author and title, and chronologically.

    Lindley and Charles Eberstadt Collection: This collection is the finest in existence concerning the life, times, and events of the Central American Federation from its foundation in 1825 through its dissolution in 1838 and of its individual components-the Republics of Costa Rica, Guatemala, Honduras, Nicaragua and El Salvador. There are official documents, private reports, military relations, constitutions and treaties. Many of the 961 rare, early and important imprints are unrecorded and unknown to history and bibliography. Also included are 314 rare imprints of the War of independence in Mexico.

    Mexican Broadside Collection: Approximately 7,000 uncataloged items, mainly from the Henry R, Wagner collections, include broadsides that cover a wide range of topic including politics, economics, Indians, slavery, health matters, natural disasters, and the inquisition. There are also government regulations, ordinances, custom regulations, taxation and proclamations.

    Puebla Archives 1565-1878: These archives consists of legal manuscripts relating to church and state affairs of the Mexican state of Puebla covering the years 1565-1878. The papers are arranged in four groups: Registers and Lists; Criminal Cases; Civil Cases; and Miscellaneous records relating to church and town affairs.

    Cuban Collection: The Yale Library has a collection of over 6,000 unique photographs of Fidel Castro’s war activities in the Oriente Mountains. Included in this collection is the original NBC newsreel film of the Cuban rebel army in 1958 (showing among other things, Che Guevara making a bomb), the complete footage of picture and sound taken by David Stone film-making group in Cuba in 1969 (23 hours in color), and the manuscript notebooks, interviews, transcripts and legal documents of the Cuban Revolutionary Government.

    James Watson Webb Papers: These papers relate to Webb’s service as American Minister to Pedro II’s Court in Brazil from 1861-1865. The papers, notably his diplomatic correspondence with Secretary of Sate William H. Seward, reports of negotiations over incidents involving Confederate and Union ships in Brazilian territorial waters, personal letters and diaries reflecting life at the Brazilian court.

     

    Microform Collections
    A complete list of microform holdings including locations and finding aid information.
     
    Policies and Procedures
    General
    The Yale Library collections are one of the world’s largest and most distinguished. The Yale University Library is a generic term for the libraries of Yale University. These include Sterling Memorial Library, Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library, Cushing/Whitney Medical Library, Law Library, and some forty-five other school, department, and college libraries.  Check here for Library locations.

    The Curator of the Latin American Collection is available for consultation and provides advanced reference services to students and faculty by appointment. The offices of the collection are located on the 3rd floor of Sterling Memorial Library.

    Curator: César Rodriguez

    Access to materials
    Access to the collections at Yale for faculty and students of the Latin American Studies Consortium of New England is obtained through the Consortium Reciprocal Borrowing Agreement.

    Bibliographic access to the Library ia available via ORBIS, the main online catalog. This system does not contain all of the materials housed at Yale, but measures are being taken to complete this task.

     Yale Library hours.   Call 203- 432-2642 for changes in Library hours.

    Public Services
    For complete information on Reader’s Services at Yale, including information on photocopying, microform readers, electronic databases, etc., is available on the Web.

    Return to top

    Updated 05/17/99