This guide provides help with finding the primary sources you need for your research, evaluating those sources, and citing them in your paper's bibliography.
On this page you can find the answers to these questions:
What Are Primary Sources? - a definition and a video tutorial
How Do I Distinguish Between a Primary, a Secondary Source, and a Tertiary Source?
How Should I Compare Primary, Secondary, and Tertiary Sources Across Disciplines? - Advice from the librarians at Yale University
What Keywords Should I Use? - the keywords to use when searching for primary sources
What Questions Should I Ask? -these can help you decide whether a source is primary or secondary
Look to other pages of this guide for help in finding primary sources on:
Washington State and Pacific Northwest (Alaska, Idaho, and Oregon) History
American History
World History
For help with organizing and citing your sources, see:
MLA Works Cited and In-text Citations
Chicago Citation Style
Primary sources are “first hand”accounts of an event, an occurrence, or a time period produced by a participant or observer at the time, or shortly thereafter. They can be published or unpublished. |
|
Typically, primary sources include: Unique documents or manuscripts - letters, diaries, journals, writings, speeches, photographs, scrapbooks, etc. Historic records of an organization - correspondence, memoranda, minutes, annual reports, etc. Government documents - records, maps, and statistical data Artwork and artifacts Music and audiovisual materials - film, audio and video tape Speeches and oral histories - printed transcripts or audio recordings Photographs and advertisements Electronic computer files - including emails This vidoe from the University of Guelph McLaughlin Library explains what primary sources are, and how they differ from secondary sources. |
In the Arts:
1. Was the source created during the time period you're studying? If the answer is yes, you are looking at a primary source.
2. Is it an object from a particular time in history? (Archie Bunker's chair? An Emily Dickinson poem?) This also counts as a primary source.
3. Was the source written after an event took place? If so, it is a secondary source.
In the Sciences:
1. Is the source reporting original research?
2. Did the author(s) carry out this original research?
If the answer to the two above questions is yes, it is a primary source.
You can use this list of WSA databases with primary sources as a starting point for your research. See the box below for suggestions on what keywords to use when searching WSA databases for primary sources.
Using the General Keyword search box - type in your topic plus one of the following words or phrases:
Archive Source*
Correspondence
Diar* (this retrieves both
Diary and Diaries)
History Archive*
History Document*
History Source*
Interview*
Letter*
Personal Narrative*
Primary source*
Speech*
Note: Use of the * at the end of a word will search for both singular and plural forms.
Primary sources are the surviving original records of a period, eyewitness accounts and first-published documentation of new information.
Examples of primary sources include:
Secondary sources interpret the past and analyze primary sources.
Examples of secondary sources include:
Tertiary sources are distillations and indexes of primary and secondary sources.
Examples of tertiary sources include:
SUBJECT |
PRIMARY |
SECONDARY |
TERTIARY |
Art History |
Painting, photograph, film |
Critical review of an artist’s work |
Encyclopedia article on the artist |
Biology |
A bird specimen |
A scholarly book on bird behavior |
EBSCO Academic eBooks database; Nest Building and Bird Behavior |
Chemistry |
Article presenting original scientific research, unpublished data, correspondence and original notes |
Review of recent research in the field summarizing new articles, patents, etc. |
Handbook of basic tables for chemical analysis |
History |
Diary, correspondence, photograph, census data |
Book about the American Industrial Revolution and its effect on rural culture |
Timeline of the American Industrial Revolution |
Literature |
Novel, poem, manuscript, correspondence |
Essay analyzing an author’s writing process |
Handbook of twentieth-century authors |
Music |
Manuscript score, print edition from composer’s lifetime, first recording of a jazz piece |
Essay analyzing the music or the composer’s compositional process, recording of a work without composer’s input |
Thematic catalog of a composer’s works; discography of a jazz artist |
Political Science |
Treaty, government document or memo |
Diplomatic history textbook |
Chronology of treaties |
Adapted from "Primary Sources at Yale". Accessed
July 10, 2024. https://primarysources.yale.edu/find-discover.
This subject guide is based on the History - Primary Sources guide created by Robert Hudson, Reference Librarian, for Cape Fear Community College Libraries in Wilmington, North Carolina.
|
|