Page by Page Guide

Getting Started The New Woman, © Schlesinger Library on the History of Women in America

Selection Criteria
Browsers
My Archive
Register/Log In
Adding Material to My Archive
My Bookshelf
My Lightbox 

Documents

Overview and Browsing
Thematic Areas
Document Details Page
Download Options and Printing
Viewing the Original Image
Share Functionality

Searching

Basic Search
Handwritten Text Recognition technology (HTR)
Advanced Search
Boolean Functionality
Search Directories
Search Results
Viewing Search Results

Image Gallery

Thematic Image Gallery

Explore

Essays
Highlighted Biographies
Featured Organisations
Video Interviews


Interactive Chronology

Further Resources

Archive Explorer
RefWorks/EndNote/Zotero

 

Getting Started

Selection Criteria

Background information on the development, selection and scope of the collections included in Gender: Identity and Social Change is contained in the Selection Criteria found under the Introduction tab.

Browsers

Gender: Identity and Social Change is optimised to use the following browsers: Microsoft Edge, Internet Explorer 10 and 11, and the latest releases of Firefox, Safari and Google Chrome.

My Archive

Click the link in the top right-hand corner to register for 'My Archive' or log in. If registering for the first time, enter details into the form provided. Your first name and last name will be displayed on the site once you have logged in. A link to the privacy policy is included at the bottom of the form.

 

Register/Log In

'My Archive' enables you to register login details and benefit from a range of bespoke features that allow you to create your own personalised collection. Signing up is easy. Click on the 'Register' link and submit your login details.

Adding Material to My Archive

Once you have logged in, you will be able to:

  • Save selected documents to 'My Bookshelf'
  • Save any image from the collection to 'My Lightbox'
  • Run a slideshow of your lightbox images
  • Save search results

Every document, search result and individual image in Gender: Identity and Social Change is tagged with the relevant 'Add to My Archive/Lightbox' button. To return to any document without the need to browse or search every time, click on the 'Add to My Archive' button and it will automatically be stored in your individual account.

My Bookshelf

Click the 'My Lightbox' or 'My Archive' links in the top right-hand corner to enter these features.

Once in 'My Archive' you can edit your profile, navigate to 'My Lightbox', view saved searches and saved documents.

Click on a saved search term to view the saved search results. Click on thumbnails in 'My Bookshelf' to view your saved documents.

Screenshot of saved search

My Lightbox

You can organise the images in 'My Lightbox' at any time by creating a new lightbox. Enter the name of your new lightbox in the box beside 'Create a New Lightbox:' and click 'Create'. Use the tick boxes beside each image to select the images you wish to copy to your new lightbox. In the 'Image Options' menu, click 'Copy selection to another lightbox' to copy the selected images.

You can view your selection of images as a slideshow and export as PDFs by selecting these options from the 'Image Options' menu.

My Lightbox view

 

Documents

 
 
Documents landing page

Overview and Browsing

Browse the documents in Gender: Identity and Social Change by clicking on the Documents tab. This shows a grid of all documents split by theme. Go directly to documents tagged with that theme by clicking on the thumbnail, or refine further by 'Library/Archive' or 'Document Type'. The grid will automatically reorder to show the theme with the most documents first.

To view all the documents in a list format, select the 'List View' tab.

Documents are loaded 200 to a page, in alphabetical order by title and can be scrolled through. You can use the options on the left to refine the list by selecting one or multiple options from 'Document Type', ‘Theme’ or 'Library/Archive'. Use the 'clear filter' option to return to the default alphabetical list.

From this page you can sort the order of each column and also select the display of the last column to feature either ‘Theme’, 'Library/Archive', ‘Document Type’ or ‘Collection’.

Navigation between pages is available at the top right of the list. Browse previous and next pages, select a page number or select a letter from the alphabetical list.

View document details pages for each item by clicking on the thumbnail or document title in the list.

Printed full text searchable documents are indicated with the following icon:  

HTR searchable documents are indicated with the following icon: 

 

Thematic Areas

Every document in Gender: Identity and Social Change has been indexed by one or more key themes. When browsing by theme, you can read a short introduction to each, including the kinds of documents included and links to items to start your research:

  • Women’s Suffrage
  • Feminism
  • The Men’s Movement
  • Education and Training
  • Employment and Labour
  • The Body
  • Conduct and Politeness
  • Domesticity and the Family
  • Government and Politics
  • Legislation and Legal Cases
  • Leisure and Entertainment
  • Organisations, Associations and Societies
  • Sex and Sexuality

  

Document Details Page

Click on a document thumbnail or title in the document list to view the 'Document Details' page. This provides thumbnail images from the document, full bibliographic information, document-level indexing data and the ability to view original images or select some, or all, of the document to download.

Scroll through thumbnails to select and view images.

Use the 'next' and 'previous' buttons to show the next or previous document details page. Use the back arrow beside the 'next' and 'previous' buttons to go back to the document list.

Download the full document as a PDF or download a range of pages using the PDF drop-down selection boxes.

Where available, some additional 'Chapter', 'Section' or 'Visual Highlights' information will be displayed underneath the metadata.

Download page range

From this page you can also add the document to 'My Archive' and export the bibliographic details of each document to RefWorks, EndNote or Zotero citation software.

 

Download Options and Printing

For the best-quality printout, it is recommended that you download the required image or images as a PDF. Within the 'Document Details' and the image-viewing pages there are several printing options. From the 'Document Details' page you can download the entire contents of the document or specify a page or image range as a PDF document, which can then be saved to file or printed. The image or page numbers available will be displayed in a drop-down box. Click on the required image/page to select the range to be downloaded.

When a page range is provided, there can be a number of 'unpaginated' images listed at the start of those available to download. These images can also be selected to download as each 'unpaginated' page listed still represents an image, but one without a printed page number. For example, if there are six 'unpaginated' images listed and you want to download them all, simply select the first image listed in the drop-down box and then select the sixth 'unpaginated' image listed in the second drop-down box.

From the image view, you can download the current page you are viewing or, where available, specific chapters as a PDF document. Clicking on these options will open a new window for the PDF to download. Please remember when downloading entire documents that many of the files will be quite large and can take some time. You will require Adobe Reader for this facility, which can be downloaded for free by clicking here.

 

Viewing the Original Image

Clicking on the thumbnail, title, section or chapter will generate the image-viewing screen. Increase or decrease the magnification of the original image by using the plus  or minus  symbols in the top left-hand corner of the image-viewer window.

To move around the image, drag the document by holding down the left mouse button and then moving the mouse to the preferred view. The mouse wheel can also be used to zoom in and out.

The expand  icon will open the image viewer in full screen.

The rotate  icon will rotate the image, which will resize to fit the screen view.

Browse through the images using the 'next' and 'previous' buttons or select a page from the drop-down list.

View of a document open in the image viewer, showing options to control the zoom, rotate and save the image to your Lightbox or download

There are various ways to navigate through a document and you can also download images to print or save. Where available, some printed documents will have additional navigation features such as jumping to the next chapter or selecting a specific page number.

Clicking on the 'Thumbnails' tab will display all the thumbnails for the document.

Thumbnail view of a document

Share Functionality

By clicking on the 'Share'  button in the top right-hand corner of the page, you can share the page you are viewing via email and social-networking sites.

 

Searching

Basic Search

A basic keyword search box is available on all screens in the top right-hand corner. Type in your search term and either click on 'Go' or press enter. You can also integrate your searches with 'Boolean' text for more advanced queries.

Underneath the basic search box are links to the 'Advanced Search' option as well as a list of 'Search Directories'.

Handwritten Text Recognition Technology (HTR)

Gender: Identity and Social Change includes more than 9,000 manuscript images from the Munby Papers (Papers of A J. Munby including those of his wife Hannah Cullwick) housed at Trinity College Cambridge, which are now fully text searchable thanks to Handwritten Text Recognition (HTR) technology.

HTR searchable documents are indicated with the following icon: 

Handwritten Text Recognition technology (HTR) FAQs

What is HTR?

Handwritten Text Recognition is a technology that aims to deliver full-text search results for handwritten documents. The software behind this technology employs artificial intelligence and probability, which does not rely on transcripts, to produce very effective full-text search results.

How do I know that a document can be searched using HTR?

All HTR-searchable documents have a pencil icon next to them on the Documents and Search Results lists, and everything in the Munby Papers (Papers of Arthur J. Munby including those of his wife Hannah Cullwick) from Trinity College Cambridge has been processed through the HTR software.

Can I see a transcript of the manuscript material?

HTR technology does not produce transcripts. The methodology used takes a different approach to identifying search terms based on artificial intelligence and probability. The result is a marked improvement in the accuracy of highlighted results over transcript-reliant systems.

Can I search the entire collection using HTR?

All documents marked with the pencil icon can be searched using HTR via the 'Search the text of this document' field. A basic site-level search or search from Search Directories will search the very detailed metadata that Adam Matthew's editorial team has assigned to each document. If there is a hit in a document's metadata for the term searched for, then the HTR software will automatically search for that term in the full text of that document if a user selects the document from the Search Results list.

Can I use phrase-searching for HTR?

Yes. You can search for phrases when searching individual HTR documents. However, note that you should not enclose the phrase in quotation marks: just type it as is.

Can I use Boolean operators like AND or OR?

Boolean operators are not currently supported. The HTR software searches for the entered search term exactly, so a search for women AND employment will search for all three words together, not women and employment as two terms occurring separately in the same document.

Advanced Search

The Advanced Search page enables you to search for several keywords or phrases using the AND, OR and NOT Boolean operators. Extra fields can be added using the 'plus'  button.

TIP: Use of these drop-down operators still follow the Boolean rules of precedence.

A date-range restriction can be entered. This can be used in conjunction with a keyword or other restricted searches, or across all documents by leaving the other fields blank.

Searches can also be restricted by ‘Document Type’, ‘Theme’ and 'Library/Archive'.

Boolean Functionality

Boolean Operators

The keyword search supports the Boolean operators AND, OR and AND NOT between keywords. Using the terms ‘suffrage’ and ‘protest’ as examples:

To return results in which both ‘suffrage’ and ‘protect’ appear, use AND between terms (TIP: The search engine already does this by default – see section on 'Automatic AND Queries').

To return results which have either ‘suffrage’ or ‘protest’, add OR between terms.

To return results in which ‘suffrage’, but not ‘protest’ appear, add AND NOT between terms. This will search for ‘suffrage’ but exclude any pages which also include ‘protest’.

TIP: You can use either upper or lower case for Boolean terms.

Automatic AND Queries

By default, the search engine only returns results which contain all your keywords. The search engine automatically uses the AND operator, so there is no need to use this when searching for multiple terms.

TIP: To broaden or refine the keyword search, try using fewer or more terms.

Phrase Searching

By adding double quotation marks to your keywords you can search for exact phrases. Words enclosed in quotation marks (“Equal Rights Amendment”) will only return results in which the words appear next to each other.

Please note that if you perform a phrase search, the number of hits displayed will still appear as individual words (e.g. if the phrase “Equal Rights Amendment” appears on a page twice, the results will show four hits).

Wildcards

Wildcards allow you to search for parts of words, enabling you to widen your search criteria. The search engine supports two types of wildcards; "?" represents one character, and "*" represents any number of characters. For example, entering 'book?' will return results for books, but entering ‘book*' will return results for book, books, bookish, bookseller etc. You can also use wildcards to search for words as part of a phrase. 

Plurals

The search engine does not automatically find plurals of search terms. If you want to look for both book and books, use the 'Word Stemming' option under the 'Advanced Search' or the "*" wildcard.

Using Word Proximity Searches

The search engine will let you look for words or phrases that occur within a specified number of words of each other. This is a useful way of specifying the context in which words should occur. For example, a search for "women w/3 employment" may be a more accurate way of finding references to specific details than using a simple "AND" operator, but offers a broader net than that of a phrase search.

Word Stemming

By ticking the 'Word Stemming' option on the 'Advanced Search' page, you can command the search engine to return results on all derivations of your search word(s). Thus a stemming-enabled keyword search for 'book' will return book, books, booked, etc. However, it will not return different words that simply begin with book (e.g. bookseller, bookkeeper). For this, you need to use a wildcard.

 

Search Directories

There is a link to the Search Directories page beneath the basic search box, in the top right-hand corner of every page. 'Search Directories' provide lists of organisations, institutions and people and performs a search across the site for that term. The list is not exhaustive but represents the terms that have been included in the metadata, so is the best way to navigate the documents if you are interested in one of these categories.

 

Search Results

At the top of the search results page, you can select to filter results by 'Documents', 'Image Gallery' or 'Secondary Resources', or refine via ‘Conflict’, 'Document type', 'Themes' or 'Library/Archive',

Results can be exported as an email.

When selecting a document from the search results list, you will be taken to the 'Document Details' page, where further details of the result will be displayed.

Full text and HTR search results will be displayed with a list of the relevant sections from the original image with additional details of the image number and number of hits where relevant. Thumbnails that contain hits will be displayed with a red border in the slideshow at the top of the page and snippets will also appear at the bottom of the page. Results may also appear in the 'Visual Highlights Search Results' tab.

These results can be reordered by pages, relevance or number of hits. Click on a snippet to view the result in this page.

To view the full document metadata click on the 'Show details' button at the top of the page. If there is a hit from the document-level metadata, then this will be highlighted.

TIP: If the document is returned in the search results with no full text hits, the metadata will be opened automatically.

 

Viewing Search Results

View the relevant image from the full text search results by selecting the link above the original image snippet (see above). You can view the document from the beginning by clicking on the thumbnail image.

Full text and HTR hits are highlighted in yellow on the original image.

Use the 'prev hit' and 'next hit' buttons above the image to browse to the next and previous hits within the document.

 

Image Gallery

Thematic Image Gallery

View of the image gallery with options to change the display view to a list, and select images using tick boxes to export as a PDF or run as a slideshow

Selected visual highlights from the documents have been individually indexed and grouped together into galleries, categorised by theme.

Within each of the galleries you can refine further by the ‘Date’, ‘Image type’ and ‘Library/Archive’ filters.

To view a slideshow of images, select the ones you want to use via the tick box next to each title, then click 'Run slideshow of selection' from the 'Image Options' drop-down. Alternatively, you can save the selection for this session (hover over the 'Image Options' drop-down and click ‘Add Selection to My Lightbox'), or download the selection as a multi-page PDF.

TIP: The order that you select your images will be the order that they are played in the slideshow.

Images can be displayed in a list view with further details by selecting this view from the 'Display Options' drop-down menu.

To view a full-size version of the image, click on it. You can browse through the images by clicking the 'Next' and 'Previous' buttons, or by using the left and right arrows on your keyboard.

Metadata relating to the slideshow material can be searched in isolation via the 'Search Galleries' field.

 

Explore

The Explore tab provides contextual information and new ways to approach the material in Gender: Identity and Social Change.

Essays

This section offers a selection of essays written by leading academics and collection specialists.

Many of the essays include hypertext links to the original documents. Clicking on a link will open a new window. If the link relates to a complete document, you will be taken to the 'Document Details' page from where you can browse the images. If the link relates to a specific page, you will be taken to the first relevant image. To return to the essay simply close or minimise the new window.

TIP: The print Print icon icon will generate a printable version of the essay.

TIP: The PDF PDF icon icon will generate a PDF version.

 

Highlighted Biographies

The biographies page highlights major figures from within the collections and those critical to the topics covered in the resource.

Using the alphabet bar, you can jump directly to specific entries, and click the title letter to return to the top of the page.

Featured Organisations

The featured organisations page highlights organisations from within the collections that are key to the history of gender.

Video Interviews

In this section leading academics discuss gender history in a video question-and-answer interview.

 

Interactive Chronology

The interactive chronology charts significant moments in gender history. Many entries have related images. Click on the image to expand it or open in full-screen view.

Interactive chronology View of option to save entries on to a personalised list in the interactive chronologyView of results in the Interactive chronology as a list

 

Further Resources

Archive Explorer

Archive Explorer is a federated searching tool that gives you a quick and convenient way to search across all Adam Matthew collections. You will only be able to access document collections that your library is subscribed to. A link to 'Archive Explorer' is available in the footer of every page.

 

RefWorks/EndNote/Zotero

You can export the bibliographic details of each document to RefWorks, EndNote and Zotero if you have user rights to these systems. These options are available to you on the 'Document Details' page of each individual item. Just click the 'RefWorks', 'EndNote' or 'Zotero' logos, and a pop-up window with instructions will appear.

 

OpenURLs

OpenURLs connect you directly to your library catalogue, allowing you to easily access material recommended on this site. You will find OpenURLs on the essay pages. Click on the reference to send this item to your institution’s link resolver and establish the easiest way to access material that is not directly available on this site.

Please note that your institution must have registered their link-resolver details with Adam Matthew Digital for the OpenURL links to be visible and active.