ShmoopTube

Where Monty Python meets your 10th grade teacher.

Search Thousands of Shmoop Videos


Writing Videos 89 videos

Wordiness
15167 Views

Want even more deets on wordiness? Click here to review. Or take a look at our entire grammar section for all the goods.

Tenses
4971 Views

Want even more deets on tenses? Click here to review. Or take a look at our entire grammar section for all the goods.

Semicolons
10243 Views

Want even more deets on semicolons? Click here to review. Or take a look at our entire grammar section for all the goods.

See All

What is a Primary Source? 43696 Views


Share It!


Description:

This video defines a primary source and what makes it different from a secondary source. What counts as original material? And where can we find these primary sources now?

Language:
English Language
Common Core Standards:

Transcript

00:00

Thank you We sneak in primary sources Allah shmoop you

00:07

can't create a historical drama are historical fiction without historical

00:11

research and you can't do historical research without digging up

00:14

some primary sources These guys captain phillips saving private ryan

00:20

twelve years a slave zero dark thirty people actually had

00:23

to do research when they were writing those awesome scripts

00:27

Primary sources are original materials that were created during the

00:30

time being studied or by someone with firsthand knowledge of

00:34

the event So let's break it down Original means the

00:38

source was created by someone actually living in the period

00:42

we're studying So if we're studying world war two and

00:45

original material could be the diary of a soldier he

00:49

wrote it himself and he was actually in the war

00:52

It originated in that time period Materials means that primary

00:57

sources take different forms It could be a letter of

01:00

painting even a toy then there's the created during the

01:05

time being studied part well a newspaper article about world

01:08

war two that was written yesterday would not be a

01:11

primary source because it was written seventy plus years after

01:14

the event Little hindsight but just to make it confusing

01:19

Primary sources can be written after the event as long

01:23

as it was created by somebody with first hand knowledge

01:27

which means primary sources could include memoirs letters or interviews

01:31

that were made after the event If the person making

01:34

them was actually there at the time like our ww

01:36

two vet Okay what isn't a primary source Well anything

01:42

written about the past that wasn't written at that time

01:45

or wasn't written by someone with firsthand knowledge of the

01:49

event secondary source were usually text that used a bunch

01:53

of primary sources to make an argument or to interpret

01:56

the past But let's say you're writing a paper and

01:59

need you primary and secondary sources You collect interviews from

02:03

ww two bets documents from government officials describing their decisions

02:08

and actions film footage from the front and a book

02:11

published by a history professor in two thousand fourteen about

02:15

world war two Well the interview's documents and film footage

02:19

would all be primary sources The book published in two

02:22

thousand fourteen would be a secondary source Okay we're going

02:26

to hit you with some types of primary sources Pecs

02:30

not the o m g l a welcome anything that's

02:32

Written down like diary's personal letters were published works like

02:36

books or newspapers images anything visual painting doodles photographs poster

02:43

tapestry never recordings Other recordings only go back two hundred

02:47

fifty years or so You've got recordings of music aural

02:50

histories interviews tv shows radio programs and films that literally

02:54

speak to us about the past Object is pretty much

02:58

covers everything else clothes toys goings tools pottery and anything

03:03

else you think if it was made in the past

03:06

All right well so according to this definition couldn't anything

03:08

that ever existed be a primary source Well sort of

03:11

but keep in mind the further back in history go

03:14

the less likely our fine primary sources that have survived

03:18

ex deteriorate writing didn't always exist We're more likely to

03:21

have old images or object but they also deteriorate So

03:25

while we might have a ton of stuff from the

03:27

recent past our primary sources get more and more rare

03:30

as we move further back in history and our ability

03:33

to construct a picture of the past It's a little

03:36

fuzzy okay but we're in the world are all these

03:38

things kept there's some sort of secret warehouse in area

03:41

fifty one Where we find them is the nsa have

03:44

a massive database of every sound ever made in the

03:47

past hundred fifty years but no objects can be found

03:52

in archives museums or personal collection Unfortunately you don't have

03:56

to travel the world visiting all these places They're breaking

03:58

into private residence There's Very convenient way of finding primary

04:02

sources The internet There are millions and millions of primary

04:06

sources that have been digitized and put on the internet

04:09

Primary sources are the key to uncovering an accurate picture

04:13

of the past without you could make up any story

04:16

you wanted about History knows Maybe lincoln would have looked

04:19

better as a blonde or score and seven blondes ago

Related Videos

What Not to do in an Introduction
32968 Views

This video offers some rules of thumb for writing a good introduction. It covers everything from tone (confidence is key!) to phrases and clichés...

What Not to do in a Conclusion
7001 Views

Even the best essays can go wrong in the conclusion—this video covers what not to do in a conclusion to help avoid any essay-ending problems. The...

Using Citations Effectively
3752 Views

You want to be as picky with your citations as Goldilocks was with her porridge—not too many, not too few... juuust right. You want to prove that...

Wordiness
15167 Views

Want even more deets on wordiness? Click here to review. Or take a look at our entire grammar section for all the goods.

Run-on Sentences
6511 Views

Want even more deets on Run-on Sentences? Click here to review. Or take a look at our entire grammar section for all the goods.