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E 349S: The Brontës, Self & Society

Preparing to Search

Preparing to Search

Sometimes, you find exactly what you need with your first search. But it often doesn't work out that way! Try this step-by-step brainstorm before you search the library catalog or databases. 

1. Save time, prepare to research!

  • Break your research question into key concepts (you'll connect these in your paper to make an original argument)
  • For each of these concepts, brainstorm multiple keywords

Sample Topic:

   Embodiment and theology in Jane Eyre

Key Concepts

Embodiment

Theology

Jane Eyre

Related Keywords

(body OR flesh)
(pain OR sickness OR disease)
sexuality OR gender

Christianity
Calvinism
salvation
piety
sacrifice

Helen Burns
St. John Rivers
Victorian*
19th century

  • Try this keyword tool to brainstorm online and send the results to yourself.


2. Combine keywords using AND and OR:

  • Too many results? Try using quotation marks around an exact phrase. Ex: "Helen Burns"
  • Still too many results? Narrow using AND. Ex: Helen Burns AND body
  • Too few results? Broaden using OR. Ex: (Calvinism OR theology*) AND (pain OR sickness OR disease)
  • Put parentheses around synonyms.
  • The asterisk finds multiple endings from a root word. Ex: wom* will bring back women, woman's, wombat, etc.


3. Brush up on the search tools available:

What is a Library Database?

Your instructor or subject librarian may throw around the term "library database" a lot, but what exactly do they mean? This video from RMIT University in Australia explains the term and how you can use databases for research. (Plus, the narrator has a great accent!)

Transcript available through YouTube.

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