 Hi, I'm Lorraine Wakna, Alden Library Reference and Instruction. This video will show you how to get started using JSTOR. How to find JSTOR. The best way to find JSTOR is to go to our homepage and use the Databases tab, type in the name of the database, and hit Search. It will take you to the record for JSTOR in our ALICE catalog, and then take you to the database. Whether you're off campus or on campus, it's best to access JSTOR and any and all of our databases from the website. Once you're in JSTOR, I would highly recommend going right to the Advanced tool, the Advanced Search. This will allow you to refine your search in different ways. Once JSTOR looks at really old stuff, I can search for works about Christopher Marlowe, including only content I can access. I'm not going to use external content because we might not have it. I would like an article, and I would like it to be in English, and I'm not going to limit my field of study right now, and I'll search. This gives me articles using the words Christopher Marlowe. Since I know that Christopher Marlowe has to do with theater, I'm going to modify my search, and I'm going to ask it to give me things from language and literature and from performing arts. And then I can redo my search now that it's more focused on the subject areas I'm looking for. Now we get a little bit better results. I still have a lot of results. If I want to narrow them further, I of course can go back into my modify search. I can add that I want to see what's been written about Faustus, and I can search again, and I get even less articles. I can look at them by relevance from newest to oldest, or from oldest to newest. Out of curiosity, I will look at oldest to newest. Wow. We have something from PMLA from 1890. We have an article from the Sawane Review from 1894. So JSTOR digitizes core journals in every field from the very first issue of the journal up to and including three to five years ago. If you're interested in one of these, you can open the record, get a page by page view, or view the entire PDF. You just have to accept the terms and conditions. You can email yourself the citation, save the citation, and when you're done, go back to your search. If you have more questions about JSTOR, feel free to ask us. So that's a quick look at JSTOR. If you have any further questions, feel free to contact us.