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MU 2722: History of American Popular Music: Primary Sources

Primary Sources for History

Primary sources are materials that provide firsthand testimony to a subject under investigation. Researchers often use these firsthand accounts of specific events to understand events from the viewpoint of people living during that time period. Primary sources include documents and artifacts from the time period under study, such as letters, diaries, songs, poems, artwork, photographs, newspaper articles, and pamphlets. Primary sources also include writings and recordings by witnesses who experienced the events or conditions being documented. For example, oral histories, autobiographies, and memoirs are primary sources.

Primary Sources: Library Databases

Primary Sources: Books at WPI

Sometimes collections of primary source documents are republished in books. To find books like these, search WPI Library Search for books about your topic and add keywords like journals, papers, letters, documents, primary sources, documentary history, or sourcebook to your search terms. 

Here are some examples of books containing primary sources:

Front cover of The Lansing Beat from 1986

D’Nim, Sue. “The Duke Still Reigns.” The Lansing Beat, July 19, 1986. https://www.jstor.org/stable/community.28038859.

CC BY-NC 4.0 DEED

Nina Simone. BBC HARDtalk, 1999. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8olEruTT_io.

Primary Sources: Examples of Helpful Websites

To find primary sources via Google, try adding keywords like journals, papers, letters, documents, primary sources, documentary history, maps, or archives to your search terms.