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- Evaluating Sources for Research
HIST 480Z/501E: Death and Dying in America
Guide Contents
Help with the Research Process
For help with selecting/narrowing a topic and finding resources, check out the Libraries' guide:
Librarian
Types of Sources
Primary Sources
Materials created at the time under study, that serve as original evidence documenting a time period, event, people, idea, or work. Primary sources can be printed materials (such as books and ephemera), manuscript/archival materials (such as diaries or ledgers), audio/visual materials (such as recordings or films), artifacts (such as clothes or personal belongings), or born-digital materials (such as emails or digital photographs). Primary sources can be found in analog, digitized, and born-digital forms. Newspapers are considered primary sources when they document an eyewitness account of an event, are used to understand interpretations/impressions of a period, are used for analysis of advertisements, etc.
Secondary Sources
Works that synthesize and/or comment on primary and/or other secondary sources. Secondary sources, which are often works of scholarship, are differentiated from primary sources by the element of critical synthesis, analysis, or commentary. Secondary sources are most often scholarly books and journal articles. Newspapers are considered secondary sources when they synthesize past reports, are research-based, and/or are used for background information on your topic.
Tertiary Sources
Works that index, abstract, organize, compile, or digest other sources, and typically present that content with relevant context.
Some definitions taken from the ACRL Guide for Primary Source Literacy
Types of Publications
Monograph:
A single book written on one topic
Edited Volume:
A book on one theme/topic with chapters on different themes/topics written by different authors
Conference Proceedings:
A book with chapters written by each presenter for one conference
Types of Publications in Peer Reviewed Journals
Research Article:
- Presents original research conducted by author(s) on a specific topic
- Peer reviewed
Review Article/Historiography:
- A summary, synthesis, discussion, or assessment of one or more research works
- Serves as a guide to a research topic, and may suggest future research and ideas
- Peer reviewed
Book Review:
- Article written by author reviewing one or more books
- Usually only one or a few pages long
- Not peer reviewed
Discussion:
- Discussion on a current issue, idea, or topic, often presented in a conversational style
- Usually a full-length article
- Not peer reviewed
Commentary, Editorial, or Reply:
- Opinion piece on an issue, topic, or study, often in a persuasive style
- Usually brief
- Not peer reviewed