History: Primary v. Secondary Sources

Use this guide to find information about topics in History

Evaluating Primary Sources

The American Library Association has a handy guide to evaluating the quality of online primary sources

  1. Who created the website?
  2. Who is the intended audience?
  3. Where did they get the primary sources from?
  4. Is the content clearly explained, organized, and accessible?

Why Use Primary Sources?

Primary sources are used across academic disciplines to bring authenticity and authority to research. Using primary sources gives a researcher a chance to interpret historic events and figures, analyze information, and support their arguments with evidence. Interpreting historical sources also helps researchers translate those skills to analyze and evaluate contemporary information. Using primary sources engages researchers with the idea of history as an active process-one which allows for their contributions as well.  

Using primary sources requires critical and analytical thinking. Keep in mind:

  • Personal opinions and biases (especially in diaries and letters)
  • Incorrect or exaggerated presentations of "facts" - try to confirm facts with other sources
  • Contextualizing the information

What are Primary and Secondary Sources?

According to the Library of Congress, "Primary sources are the raw materials of history — original documents and objects which were created at the time under study. They are different from secondary sources, accounts or interpretations of events created by someone without firsthand experience.”

Primary sources provides direct, firsthand evidence about an event, object, or person. They are not interpretative beyond that original perspective. Primary sources include everything from diaries, letters, manuscripts, audio and video recordings, speeches, artwork, interview, surveys, emails, scientific research results, census records, etc. 

Secondary sources is a secondhand account or interpretation of an event, object, or person. They describe, interpret, discuss, analyze, evaluate, and interpret primary sources. Secondary sources are often published works, such as textbooks, documentaries, journal articles, and nonfiction books. Also includes interpretations of the significance of data sets, book or movie reviews, etc.

It can be difficult to tell the difference between primary and secondary sources. For example, some materials might be considered a primary source of one topic but a secondary source for another. For example,  a biography about Amelia Earhart might be a secondary source for a research project about Amelia Earhart, but a primary source for a research project analyzing how historians have interpreted her life. 

See more examples of primary and secondary sources below.

 

Examples of Primary and Secondary Sources

  Primary Secondary
History "The Gettysburg Address" by Abraham Lincoln Television documentary on the aftermath of the Civil War
Literature Jane Austen's Pride and Prejudice Magazine review of a film adaptation that compares and contrasts the film and the novel
Art The Mona Lisa by Leonardo da Vinci Journal article about Renaissance painters
Political Science U.S. Census Statistics Book about changes in racial composition of urban cities in the U.S.
Biology Results of an original experiment Conference presentation on the significance of the experiment results in comparison to similar studies

 

Practice

Subjects: History
  • Last Updated: Mar 22, 2024 2:35 PM
  • URL: https://libguides.gvsu.edu/history