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Guide to History on the Internet by Patrick Reagan,

Guide to History on the Internet by Patrick Reagan,
The Internet permeates contemporary American life, creating enormous possibilities for innovative use in history classrooms and student projects. This concise guide focuses on practical ways that students and teachers can utilize the growing body of library and archival catalogs, primary sources, web sites, images, and sounds to complement and enhance traditional ways of learning, teaching, and researching the human past. Available either as a separate work or packaged with textbooks in United States, Western Civilization, World History, and upper division history courses, this guide will help students to learn how to use e-mail, surf the Internet for quality history sites, employ search engines effectively, create online student projects, and explore the emerging world of multimedia history. Helpful for instructors who wish to learn how to use scholarly networks, professional web sites, and evaluate reliable web resources to bring new dimensions to the craft of understanding the past. An extensive appendix provides links to the best history-related sites on the Internet by time period and subject as well as resources for scholars and samples of innovative CD-ROM projects in history.



Sacred Sites and the Colonial Encounter: A History of Meaning and Memory in Ghana by Sandra E. Greene, X
Sacred Sites and the Colonial Encounter: A History of Meaning and Memory in Ghana by Sandra E. Greene, X
Sandra E. Greene reconstructs a vivid and convincing portrait of the human and physical environment of the 19th-century Anlo-Ewe people of Ghana and brings history and memory into contemporary context. Drawing on her extensive fieldwork, early European accounts, and missionary archives and publications, Greene shows how ideas from outside forced sacred and spiritual meanings associated with particular bodies of water, burial sites, sacred towns, and the human body itself to change in favor of more scientific and regulatory views. Anlo responses to these colonial ideas involved considerable resistance, and, over time, the Anlo began to attribute selective, varied, and often contradictory meanings to the body and the spaces they inhabited. Despite these multiple meanings, Greene shows that the Anlo were successful in forging a consensus on how to manage their identity, environment, and community.



Archive site - An archive site is a type of website that stores information on, or the actual, webpages from the past for anyone to view.

News site - The first set of news sites emerged when brick-and-mortar news providers moved their content online. These included New York Times (www.

SceneSpot - SceneSpot is one of the major demoscene focus points that developed after the closure of the Hornet Archive. While not hosting files like Hornet did, it acts as a news and notifaction site.

News satire - News satire, sometimes alternately called Fake news, is a type of satire presented in a format typical of mainstream journalism. News satire has been around almost as long as what we consider journalism, but it is particularly popular on the web, where it is relatively easy to mimic a credible news source and stories may achieve wide distribution from nearly any site.



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