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How Do I Find Primary Sources for a History Research Project?

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Manage episode 359498314 series 2327264
Content provided by Robert Denning and James Fennessy, Robert Denning, and James Fennessy. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Robert Denning and James Fennessy, Robert Denning, and James Fennessy or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://ppacc.player.fm/legal.

In this fourth episode of our series on how historians research and write on historical topics, the panel explains how they identify relevant primary sources that will help them go beyond the existing secondary source literature. We will discuss different ways to search for relevant and useful primary sources, how to determine which primary sources might be more useful or important than others, and the historian’s ethical responsibility to be familiar with as much of the primary source base as possible.

Speaker timeline:

02:15 - CB Repass
04:14 - Eric Greisinger
05:11 - Ryan Tripp
06:00 - Matt Schandler
10:40 - Rob Denning
13:23 - Matt Schandler
15:20 - Allison Millward
17:18 - Eric Greisinger
17:32 - Rob Denning
19:08 - CB Repass
21:11 - Ryan Tripp
21:34 - Rob Denning
22:28 - Eric Greisinger

  continue reading

163 episodes

Artwork
iconShare
 
Manage episode 359498314 series 2327264
Content provided by Robert Denning and James Fennessy, Robert Denning, and James Fennessy. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Robert Denning and James Fennessy, Robert Denning, and James Fennessy or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://ppacc.player.fm/legal.

In this fourth episode of our series on how historians research and write on historical topics, the panel explains how they identify relevant primary sources that will help them go beyond the existing secondary source literature. We will discuss different ways to search for relevant and useful primary sources, how to determine which primary sources might be more useful or important than others, and the historian’s ethical responsibility to be familiar with as much of the primary source base as possible.

Speaker timeline:

02:15 - CB Repass
04:14 - Eric Greisinger
05:11 - Ryan Tripp
06:00 - Matt Schandler
10:40 - Rob Denning
13:23 - Matt Schandler
15:20 - Allison Millward
17:18 - Eric Greisinger
17:32 - Rob Denning
19:08 - CB Repass
21:11 - Ryan Tripp
21:34 - Rob Denning
22:28 - Eric Greisinger

  continue reading

163 episodes

All episodes

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