Filed under: Audio, Equipment, Gear, New Equipment, New stuff, News, Recording, SwemStuff | Tags: Gear, mackie, microphones, piano
This semester we are happy to announce some new equipment in the Media Center. Stop by and check this out. New equipment available for loan:
- H2 Zoom Digital Recorder
- H4 Zoom Digital Recorder
- Alesis IO|26 Firewire Audio Interface
- Canon ZR800 MiniDV Camcorder
- Marantz PMD620 Digital Recorder
- M-Audio ProKeys 88sx Lightweight Stage Piano
- New Condenser Microphones (Audio-Technica MB4K, Audio-Technica ATM650
W&M students Steven Koernig, Randall Taylor, Per Hoel, Thomas Baumgardner, Zan Gillies and Annie Lewis should be proud. Their entry, “Bring Back the Box” made to number 5. Thanks for voting and if you see them around, congratulate them!
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We just got some new cameras in today. These cameras increase our general inventory and replace some of our older ones that have seen almost 2 years of use and hundreds of loans. This gets us through the rest of the semester. We replaced our panasonic cameras with the same model (Panasonic PVGS500 3 chip MiniDV cameras) and added two new smaller MiniDV cameras (Canon ZR800’s).
To keep the cameras available for the record number of classes completing video projects, our cameras are only available to students working on a project for a class.
Swem Library
Film Studies Subject Guide Indexes to Periodical Literature - Finding Articles
Film Studies articles can be found in a wide variety of interdisciplinary periodical literature, from the popular to the scholarly. Below are some key indexes to periodical literature that can help you locate cinema / film articles. If you have any questions about using these resources or evaluating scholarly/popular articles, please contact Troy Davis (mtdavi@wm.edu / chat: mtdavi05), Subject Librarian for Film Studies.
Film Literature Index Online
Online Coverage up to 2002 (no full-text)
The Film Literature Index (FLI) annually indexes 150 film and television periodicals from 30 countries cover-to-cover and 200 other periodicals selectively for articles on film and television. The periodicals range from the scholarly to the popular. More than 2,000 subject headings provide detailed analysis of the articles.
Access
Film Literature Index (Print)
Coverage: 1972 - Present
Ref PN1993.F453
Communication & Mass Media Complete
Access
This database is comprised of two popular databases in the fields of communication and mass media studies — CommSearch (formerly produced by the National Communication Association (NCA)), and Mass Media Articles Index (formerly produced by Pennsylvania State University).
International Index to Film/TV Periodicals (La Federation Internationale des Archives du Film [FIAF])
Coverage: 1972 - Present
Access The FIAF International FilmArchive Database is published by the International Federation of Film Archives (FIAF) and contains several databases: the International Index to Film Periodicals , the International Index to Television Periodicals , the List of Periodicals Indexed ,the Treasures from the Film Archives , the Bibliography of FIAF Members Publications and the International Directory of Film and TV Documentation Collections.
The main database, the International Index to Film Periodicals contains over 230,000 article references from more than 300 periodicals. The database, which cumulates citations from the annual printed volume, offers in-depth coverage of the worlds foremost academic and popular film journals from 1972 to the present.
Film Indexes Online
AccessContains two indexes or databases; Film Index International and the American Film Instutute Catalog. Film Index International is a comprehensive filmography from 1900 to the present that offers international coverage of over 120,000 films and 735,000 film personalities from over 180 countries. Its rich content also includes information on international film awards, as well as searchable plot summaries and full cast and crew lists. The AFI Catalog, compiled by specialist researchers at the American Film Institute (AFI), is the premier resource for American films, providing an exhaustive view of American features produced between 1893 and 1971.
MLA International Bibliography
Coverage: 1963 - Present
Access The MLA International Bibliography , produced by the Modern Language Association of America, consists of bibliographic records pertaining to literature, language, linguistics, and folklore and includes coverage from 1963 to the present. The MLA International Bibliography provides access to scholarly research in nearly 4,000 journals and series. It also covers relevant monographs, working papers, proceedings, bibliographies, and other formats. Covers cinema and film journals.
Academic One File
AccessPeer-reviewed, full-text articles from the world’s leading journals and reference sources. Extensive coverage of the physical sciences, technology, medicine, social sciences, the arts, theology, literature and other subjects. Includes full-text coverage of the New York Times back to 1995; full-text of the Financial Times, and Times of London from 1985. Also includes a continued linking arrangement with JSTOR for many of the periodicals. Updated daily
Academic Search Premier Coverage: 1975 -
Access
This resource contains full text for 3,956 scholarly publications with more than 100 going back to 1975 or further. Academic Search Premier includes PDF images for the great majority of journals; many of these PDFs are native (searchable) or scanned-in-color.
Art Full Text
Coverage: 1984- Present
Access Art Full Text is a bibliographic database that indexes and abstracts articles from periodicals published throughout the world. Full-text coverage for selected periodicals is also included. Periodical coverage includes English-language periodicals, yearbooks, and museum bulletins, as well as periodicals published in French, Italian, German, Japanese, Spanish, Dutch, and Swedish. In addition to articles, Art Full Text indexes reproductions of works of art that appear in indexed periodicals. Indexing coverage begins 1984; abstracting coverage begins with January 1994. The abstracts range from 50 to 300 words and describe the content and scope of the source articles. Full-text coverage begins in 1997.
Arts & Humanities Citiation Index (Selective Title List)
Coverage: 1980 - Present
Access The ISI® Arts & Humanities Citation Index provides access to current and retrospective bibliographic information and cited references found in nearly 1,130 of the world’s leading arts & humanities journals.
Expanded Academic ASAP
Coverage: 1980 - Present
Access Contains citations and full-text of journal, newspaper, and periodical articles. Approximately 50% of the database’s contents is full-text. While not covering any single discipline in great depth, Expanded Academic ASAP can be used for quick research in any of a number of subject areas.
Essay and General Literature Index
Access This unique reference offers precise access to nearly 65,000 essays contained in some 5,300 anthologies and collections—a wealth of information that might be otherwise hidden away in your library. Some 300 single and multi-author collections are indexed annually, plus more than 20 selected annuals and serials. Coverage spans the entire range of the humanities and social sciences, including literary works, art history, drama, and film.
The New Film Index; A Bibliography of Magazine Articles in English, 1930-1970
New York, Dutton, 1975
Ref PN1994 .A52 M3
This vid is an entry for Apple’s Insomnia Contest. If you like it, then vote for it
Filed under: Audio, Garage Band, Logic, New stuff, Recording, Software, SoundTrack Pro, SwemStuff
If you’re into music, recording it, editing it, or producing it, then we got you covered. We’ve recently upgraded three audio apps in our software arsenal. The first is GarageBand. The basic, bare bones but powerful “recording studio” software from Apple. All the new apple audio apps have multi-take recording features. GarageBand adds something called “Magic GarageBand” (hilarious, even if it’s not very useful). The second is SoundTrack Pro . Very Cool. The Third is Logic Studio. A significant upgrade that de-clutters the interface, making professional recording and mixing even more accessible. Stop by and check them out. If you want a one-on-one session on how to use any of the apps, shoot me an email at mtdavi@wm.edu.
Filed under: Events, Learn, News, Student Filmmaking, SwemStuff, Tips and Tricks
How to do Good Reporting in the Era of Globalization
When: Friday, September 21, 2:00-3:30 pm
Where: Ford Classroom, Media Center, Swem Library
This informal workshop will focus on issues of journalistic story
telling in multiple media: How to find a story and get the scenes needed
to tell the story well across “platforms.” How to “sell” that story so a
national show will run it. And, crucially, how to confront the ethical,
logistical, cultural and other challenges in telling the story well,
especially a story from outside the United States.
/Free and Open to All Comers!/
/Bring Your Questions & Ideas!/
Mary Stucky has been a TV, radio, and web journalist for more than
fifteen years. She a co-founders of Round Earth Productions, which
writes and produces stories that explain how the policies and actions of
the developed world change the lives of people around the globe. Mary
and Round Earth aim for vivid, personal stories that will help listeners
in America make informed decisions about globally important issues.
Currently Round Earth’s stories focus on Latin America and are broadcast
on public radio’s national news and cultural programs. In addition,
Round Earth reporting is carried on the websites of 70 commercial
television stations across the country and on the World Vision Report,
which airs on 300 mostly Christian radio stations nationwide.
In addition to her work with Round Earth Productions, Mary has reported
on Chinese and Mmong immigrants as part of the public radio documentary
“Crossing East,” which won a 2006 Peabody Award, broadcasting’s highest
honor. Mary has covered social and cultural issues, foreign affairs,
public policy and the environment in South America, Mexico, Cuba, Europe
and Canada. For 13 years, Mary was a reporter/anchor for the NBC-TV
affiliate in Minneapolis. Mary’s reporting awards include the New York
Festival’s Gold World Medal.
For other screenings of the film studies and media center, visit our calendar at http://swem.wm.edu/services/media/calendar.cfm
Sept 6 Thu, 5 pm., Ford Screening Room at Swem Library Media Center
Who Will Sing a Lullaby …(29 min., dir. Nina Rudik, Ukraine 2006)
Masha’s father and Katya’s grandfather are on paternity leave. They are among the few men from Kiev who dared to use their right to take paternal leave. Challenging their traditional role as breadwinners, overcoming social stigma, and encouraging their wives to realize themselves outside of the home, Masha’s father and Katya’s grandfather do not think of themselves as heroes and dependants.
Sept 20 Thu, 5 pm., Ford Screening Room at Swem Library Media Center
There are Women in Russian Villages (Dir. Pavel Kostomarov and Antoin Kattin, Russia 2006)
In this film, two women, a mother and a her daughter, demonstrate that poverty in Russia is increasingly a women’s phenomenon. Liuba and Alesya are milkmaids at a state farm—a profession that is underpaid and perceived as too strenuous for most people. But Liuba and Alesya, who are raising children and fleeting domestic violence, have little choice.
Sept 25 Tue, 5 pm., Ford Screening Room at Swem Library Media Center
Kristina and Christ (Dir. Inesa Kurklietyte, Lithuania 2006)
In Lithuania, women occupy a lower position than men in the Lutheran Church hierarchy. Kristina, a graduate of Oxford University, is not ordained to become a priest because she is a woman. As an assistant pastor, she could act as a lay person only. Committed to theology and educating others, she has focused on encouraging women and girls in her community to seek equal rights for women and men in the Church and society at large.
Films are introduced by Elena and Alexander Prokhorov
For 7 days during the spring semester 2007, we set up a camera microphone, lights and background, ala Errol Morris, and asked people coming in to the media center to answer a few questions. We accumulated over 4 hours of footage. Here’s a condensed 6 minutes or so. The media center at Swem is officially cool.




