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UGS 302: Dis/Ability (Shryock)

Primary vs Secondary Sources

What is a Primary Source?

Primary sources are produced by participants or direct observers of an issue, event or time period. These sources may be recorded during the event or later on, by a participant reflecting upon the event. In some cases, it will be difficult to obtain the original source, so you may have to rely on copies (photocopies, microfilm, digital copies). Copies or transcriptions of a primary source still count as a primary source.  

Some examples of primary sources include:

  • Newspapers
  • Speeches
  • Government documents
  • Legal documents
  • Public opinion polls
  • Personal materials, including letters, diaries, interviews, memoirs, autobiographies, and oral histories
  • Images
  • Works of art (novels, plays, paintings, etc.)

How to Analyze Primary Sources

While primary sources are often desirable for the raw, non-interpreted information they provide, it is important to analyze them for your research. Ask yourself these questions:

  • Who is the creator and what was their relationship to the event or issue?
  • Why did the creator produce this source?
  • Was the source for personal use?  For a large audience?
  • Was the source intended to be public (newspaper) or private (correspondence)?
  • How neutral was the creator?  What biases or interests might have influenced how the source was created?
  • Can the source be substantiated by other primary sources? Can you confirm what the creator is saying?

What is a Secondary Source?

A secondary source is a source created by someone who did not directly witness the events in question. Creators of secondary sources will often read or watch primary sources in order to discover what happened at an event, and they may include copies of primary sources in the secondary source they create. Examples of secondary sources:

  • Textbooks
  • Documentaries
  • Literature review
  • Criticism

Keep in mind that the difference between a primary source and a secondary source isn't that the former is old!

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Course Requirements

If you are unsure whether or not a source you have found meets the primary source requirement for a particular class or project, please ask your professor

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