Extra Extra! Real, professional, Hebrew digitization has finally arrived. J-Stor has added Tarbiz, Zion, and Measef Zion! Life on-line will never be the same (hat-tip, Mississippi Fred Macdowell and Leor Jacobi).
Extra Extra! Real, professional, Hebrew digitization has finally arrived. J-Stor has added Tarbiz, Zion, and Measef Zion! Life on-line will never be the same (hat-tip, Mississippi Fred Macdowell and Leor Jacobi).
The hat tip really belongs to S.
חבל that they didn’t put it on a free journal hosting site. I have no way to access JSTOR!!!
The National Library of Israel offers access to JSTOR – Arts & Sciences I-VIII which includes Jewish Studies to all readers who come to the library.
Are the full Tarbiz articles available or just the title and opening page? If it is the former, can you please give more elaborate instructions on how to access the full articles. Thanks!
Through Hebrew U we have access to the full articles. It is possible that other institutions (e.g., my high school) only have citation access.
i am here in ny in a real estate office how do i get complete copies of articles without paying those fees.
Jay-
The situation isn’t good…
For now, the Feinberg eCollection through Spertus is supposed to allow access to numerous online databases, including “Jewish Studies Source”- which contains academic journals. Signing up to Feinberg costs money but is much cheaper than actually subscribing to the journals or purchasing any of the other databases:
http://www.spertus.edu/content/feinberg-ecollection#overlay-context=content/online-resources.
A lot of anthropology blogs have been pushing for “open-access journals”. Here’s a recent post from one of them explaining their plight: http://www.antropologi.info/blog/anthropology/2011/academic-publishing
Just read some Tarbiz online.
Thanks for letting me know
I’ve found it difficult to search for particular articles in Tarbiz through JSTOR. Even when I search by author, their Hebrew articles do not appear in results list. Going to this link, which shows lists links to all volumes is quickest.
http://www.jstor.org/action/showPublication?journalCode=tarbiz
this one’s also good:
http://about.jstor.org/hebrew-journals-pilot-project
hope that’s useful,
mika