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Secondary source material serves several purposes for the historian. These sources provide:
Just like with primary source material, ask yourself if what you have is biased in any way. How old is the publication? Has new evidence or historiographic methods appeared since the publication of the item at hand?
This means you are going to deep dive into books and scholarly journals. Expect to find differing viewpoints and interpretations and be sure to bring these into your own work. Not that you necessarily agree with the arguments you find but you need to acknowledge the disagreements and provide evidence to support your interpretation. This is entering the scholarly discussion and part of being a historian.
In the case of books, it might be helpful to look at book reviews written by history scholars (not the promotional blurbs so popular with publishers.) scholarly book reviews will point out strengths and weaknesses in the research methodology and resources. This can be very helpful as you become acquainted with key contributors, current arguments, and sources on your historical topic.
Secondary sources can be books or articles found through the library catalog or databases. Here are some things to check for to be sure you are getting quality material:
The Library Catalog is the place to search first. Why? Because the librarian in collaboration with the History faculty has carefully selected most of the collection for quality and relevance to our disciplines. Some ebook titles come in packages so not every title is individually selected but the ebook vendors we deal with are chosen for the overall quality of the publishers they source titles from.
See the video clip below on searching the library catalog and limiting to ebook format. Some titles will need the Overdrive Libby app downloaded and if you use the public library, you may already have this app installed.
If you find something in our print collection--due concerns about everyone's safety, our print materials are not available for check out and sadly, the stacks are not open to browsing (a favorite pastime of historians.) Never fear! The library has put procedures in place to get what you need in digital versions for touch-free access whenever possible. Use the Request Access button in the book record and it will be mailed to your home or purchased in ebook form.
We have a robust collection of digital scholarly journals in a number of databases. Not every database in the collection is going to be useful for historical research but will give you something based on your search term! Save yourself time and effort by searching the most relevant/history-specific collections, you will be glad you did.
If you find an article is not offer a link to full text, look or the GET IT link to locate in another of our databases, or request through our Interlibrary Loan service. We are committed to getting you what you need!
Here are recommendations for where to start:
Highest Recommendation due to content and special search features:
America: History & Life covers United States history from the 15th century on. Canada and Mexico are included to a lesser extent.
Historical Abstracts is the companion to America: History and Life, covering the rest of the world.
Also Useful:
JSTOR has a large collection of history studies journals. In some cases, because there is content as far back as 1838, earlier articles might serve as primary sources.
Project Muse has some titles that duplicate JSTOR but also has unique content not found elsewhere.
Other databases to search with some history-focused content:
Sage Journals Online Choose the Social Sciences & Humanities collection to focus your results.
Academic Search Ultimate Not all content will be scholarly or peer-reviewed, so you need to be selective.
Wiley Online Library Scroll down to the Humanities group to focus on history journal results.
Subject-focused databases may have some history-relevant content such as Women's Studies International, Art Full Text, and Communication and Mass Media Complete. Ask for assistance in narrowing your choices.