Primary Sources By Region
Don't miss the primary-source databases described on the other pages of this guide:
Research Manuals
Book-length guides to locating and evaluating primary sources. Click title to see full bibliographic record, including call #, in Diamond. Click book jacket to view record on Amazon. Except where noted, these titles are not available full-text online.
The Historian's Toolbox: A Student Guide to the Theory and Craft of History - Robert C. Williams
Call Number: D16 .W62 2007
ISBN/ISSN: 076562026X
See Part 2, "The Tools of History," section on "Sources and Evidence". Note Google Preview button in Diamond for online access to part of this book!
The Information-Literate Historian: A Guide to Research for History Students - Presnell, Jenny L.
Call Number: D16.2 .P715 2007
ISBN/ISSN: 0195176529
See Chapter 6, "The Thrill of Discovery: Primary Sources"
Student Guide to Research in the Digital Age: How to Locate and Evaluate Information Sources - Stebbins, Leslie F. (Leslie Foster)
Call Number: ZA3075 .S74 2006
ISBN/ISSN: 1591580994
See Chapter 4, "Primary Sources: Online Tools and Digitized Collections". Note Google Preview button in Diamond for online access to part of this book!
Find Primary Sources: An Introduction
What Are Primary Sources?
"Primary sources are original records created at the time historical events occurred or well after events in the form of memoirs and oral histories. Primary sources may include letters, manuscripts, diaries, journals, newspapers, speeches, interviews, memoirs, documents produced by government agencies such as Congress or the Office of the President, photographs, audio recordings, moving pictures or video recordings, research data, and objects or artifacts such as works of art or ancient roads, buildings, tools, and weapons. These sources serve as the raw material to interpret the past, and when they are used along with previous interpretations by historians, they provide the resources necessary for historical research." Source: Using Primary Sources on the Web, a website created by the History Section of the American Library Association designed to help researchers locate, evaluate, and properly cite online primary sources.
Scholars analyze and interpret primary sources in secondary works, particularly scholarly monographs (books) and peer-reviewed journal articles. Secondary sources need not be scholarly, however, and can include popular magazine and newspaper articles, non-academic biographies, textbooks, or websites. Please contact your professor or me if you are having difficulty differentiating between primary and secondary sources. Occasionally you might come across a reference to a "tertiary" source. Tertiary sources are essentially reference works; they list, index, summarize, or in some other way facilitate access to both primary and secondary sources. Examples of tertiary sources in history include Historical Abstracts and the Oxford Dictionary of National Biography.
- Temple University Libraries provide access to numerous primary-source history databases. Explore them all from the Primary Sources - Europe and Primary Sources - United States sub-tabs in this guide.
- Digital reproductions of primary documents in European and American history are now relatively abundant online. Link to some of the best free portals -- EuroDocs, American Memory, etc. -- from the Primary Sources - Europe and Primary Sources - United States sub-tabs in this guide.
- Recall that the vast majority of primary sources remain available only in paper. These can take the form of reproductions of letters and diaries published in commonly-held books, or rare manuscripts available only in a single library or archive. Search the Diamond catalog to find primary sources in Paley and other Temple libraries. Look for records in which the Library of Congress Subject Headings (LCSH) include the word "Sources". If you see this term it means that you have found a primary source record. Note the call # to retrieve from Paley or Library Depository. See "More Options" box, below, for additional details and search examples.
- Special Collections, Urban Archives, and the Blockson Collection are three important archival repositories on Temple's main campus. Find links to other area institutions with significant archival collections in the Philadelphia Area tab above.
Find Primary Sources: Diamond, the Library Catalog
Search Diamond to find primary sources in books and other printed works. Begin by taking just a few minutes to understand Library of Congress Subject Headings, or LCSH for short. Subject headings are "tags" applied by professional librarians to records in library catalogs. They are similar to but more specialized than the tags used in blogs and other Web 2.0 applications.
Such tags offer researchers accurate descriptions of books and other library resources. Critically, subject headings provide information about the type of work described: primary source, biography, bibliography, etc. Remember that the term Sources is used as a subheading in LCSH to identify primary-source material. Other primary-source subheadings include Personal Narratives, Correspondence, and Diaries.
Example: A researcher needs to find primary-source documents on the U.S. Civil War. The most relevant subject heading is:
United States -- History -- Civil War, 1861-1865 -- Sources.
A long and complicated "tag," granted, and not very intuitive! Fortunately, the researcher effectively needs to know only that Sources is used as a subheading to identify primary works. The following keyword searches, which take advantage of distinct search "facets" as described in the Find Books tab, reveal citations to books that contain U.S. Civil War primary documents.
- "Civil War" AND "United States" AND s:Sources
- "Civil War" AND "United States" AND s:Diaries
- Reconstruction AND s:Sources
- Gettysburg AND "Personal Narratives"
- Confederate AND Correspondence
Note: In the examples above, placing "s:" before the search terms Sources and Diaries instructs the catalog to return only records that contain those terms in the subject field; this technique improves search relevance but is optional.
Reference Librarian |
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Contact Info:
Paley Library, Room 319
(M-F, 10-6) AND
History Dept., GH, Room 937
(M & Th, 11-noon)
Phone: 215-204-4250
Send Email
Subjects:
History, Latin American Studies (particularly Ancient Mesoamerica), Spanish & Portuguese
More Options
More help locating historical documents online and in libraries and archives throughout the country and world...
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