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HIST 489WR Indigenous Peoples and Empire in Latin America.

This guide is designed to assist the students in Dr. Yannakakis's & Dr. Billing's Spring 2023 course with their research

What are Secondary Sources?

  • Secondary sources interpret, analyze, and discuss the evidence provided by primary sources. Examples of secondary sources include scholarly books and articles.
  • Secondary sources are generally a second-hand account or observation at least one step removed from the event, i.e., accounts written after the fact by people not present when an event took place. Such sources are second-hand interpretations of what occurred.
  • Secondary sources, however, can be considered to be primary sources depending on the context of their use. For example, Ken Burns' documentary of the Civil War is a secondary source for Civil War researchers (because it consists of Burns' interpretation of primary source materials from the Civil War), but a primary source for those studying documentary filmmaking.
  • Secondary sources benefit from the filter of time and differing cultural contexts and perspectives which may assist (or interfere with) scholarly analysis.

Secondary sources can include:

  • biographical works;
  • commentaries and critical reviews;
  • books other than fiction or autobiographies
  • journal, newspaper, and magazine articles written well after an event takes place

*Some of the above material is used with permission from the University of Pittsburgh Library's research guide on Primary Sources

Inter-Library Loan

If Emory does not have a copy of an article use the Inter-Library Loan service to get a copy.  

Interlibrary Loan (ILL), you can: 

  • get copies of articles that Emory doesn't own.

You will be notified when your materials arrive and be provided instructions for electronic access.