According to their announcement not all material has been released yet. It will be available in stages.
I was able to access an article in Science from May, 1910 which was quite useful. It is footnote 2 in the article, San Luis Valley
Fred
The second two links work for guest users; the first requires institutional subscription. Looks like pamphlets must not be included for whatever reason.
Bob
On 9/10/2011 12:48 PM, Andrew Gray wrote:
On 10 September 2011 16:14, Bob the Wikipedian bobthewikipedian@gmail.com wrote:
Will this be accessible to individuals without access to a subscribed institution? I've lost my access to JSTOR ever since I graduated in May.
That is indeed the plan, it seems. Post-1870/1922 material will still be unavailable unless you're at an institution with a subscription to that specific content, though.
I'm not sure if this applies to content in the general "journal" collections only, or if it also covers things like the 19th Century Pamphlets Collection - I suppose the way to find out is to test!
http://www.jstor.org/stable/60100683 is an 1828 pamphlet defending medical dissection from the Pamphlets Collection. http://www.jstor.org/stable/25497782 is an 1868 paper on Ogham from the Ireland Collection. http://www.jstor.org/stable/25665642 is an 1868 paper on Hegelianism from one of the general collections.
If you can read all three without a login or without being on a network belonging to a member, it's worked :-)
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