newspapers & magazines as historical sources. what is a primary source?

15
Newspapers & Magazines as Historical Sources

Post on 20-Dec-2015

224 views

Category:

Documents


2 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Newspapers & Magazines as Historical Sources. What is a primary source?

Newspapers & Magazines as Historical Sources

Page 2: Newspapers & Magazines as Historical Sources. What is a primary source?

What is a primary source?

Page 3: Newspapers & Magazines as Historical Sources. What is a primary source?

Why are newspapers and magazines primary sources? What do they tell you?

Page 4: Newspapers & Magazines as Historical Sources. What is a primary source?

They … Public concerns Current events Local, national, international Technologies Advertisements Vocabulary – language of the time Cartoons – some still published today; more political

cartoons Little focus on celebrities, social values Provide “current” info Show how events of the past were reported when the

events occurred.

Page 5: Newspapers & Magazines as Historical Sources. What is a primary source?

Major newspapers Los Angeles Times, 1886 – present New York Times, 1857 – present Washington Post, 1877 – present San Francisco Chronicle, 1865 – present Seattle Times, 1895 – present Seattle Post Intelligencer, 1888 – present Times (of London), 1788 – present

Page 6: Newspapers & Magazines as Historical Sources. What is a primary source?

Alternative, ethnic, minority, underground, & special audience newspapers

Berkeley Barb Chicago Defender The Great Speckled Bird – Atlanta Helix - Seattle International Examiner - Seattle Notes on Pot - Dallas The Rebel - Montreal

Page 7: Newspapers & Magazines as Historical Sources. What is a primary source?

Some magazines Architectural Digest – LA, 1925 to

present Life – Chicago & NY, 1883 to present Nation – NY, 1865 to present Newsweek – LA, 1933 to present Time – NY, 1923 to present TV Guide – PA, 1953 to present Variety – NY, 1905 to present

Page 8: Newspapers & Magazines as Historical Sources. What is a primary source?

How do newspapers & magazines differ?Newspapers … Journalists Daily Just the facts More local Quotes Higher circulation, less expensive High school level readership More disposable Magazines … Journalists, often experts or national figures Weekly or monthly More detail, analysis More general focus, more national Interviews Subject specific/trade magazines May require knowledge of the subject Glossy, larger photos

Page 9: Newspapers & Magazines as Historical Sources. What is a primary source?

Newspaper indexing Historically inadequate

Why? Newspapers have a bad rap Difficult – too much content

Little profit, but this is changing… Many of the major newspapers are

indexed. The key is finding the index.

Page 10: Newspapers & Magazines as Historical Sources. What is a primary source?

Finding the right index

There are many indexes available in the UW Libraries. Which one to use? That depends on …

the time period for which you want information which publication(s) you want to use place of publication: domestic or foreign? state?

city? language: English? other? scope: general? alternative? ethnic? may depend on full text availability

Page 11: Newspapers & Magazines as Historical Sources. What is a primary source?

Where are the indexes? On the UW Libraries Web site

Resources by Subject - News Resources – Electronic Newspapers Microform & Newspaper Collections Web site

Finding News Articles Searchable Guide to Newspaper Indexes

On a shelf (in print) or in a cabinet (on microform) in the library

Ask a librarian!

Page 12: Newspapers & Magazines as Historical Sources. What is a primary source?

What if there isn’t an index?

If there isn’t an index for the time period that you’re researching or for the publication that you need:

1. Use the NYT, Times, or Readers’ Guide indexes available online through the UW Libraries Web site.

Page 13: Newspapers & Magazines as Historical Sources. What is a primary source?

What if there isn’t an index?

2. Use bibliographies in books, encyclopedias, magazine & journal articles, and on the Web.

Page 14: Newspapers & Magazines as Historical Sources. What is a primary source?

What if there isn’t an index?

3. Browse through a week or two of the newspaper or magazine (print or microfilm or online)

Page 15: Newspapers & Magazines as Historical Sources. What is a primary source?

Finding newspapers & magazines in the library

If the database doesn’t provide full text or a library location:

1. Use the UW Libraries Catalog 2. Choose the journal subset 3. Do a title search for the title of the

newspaper or magazine. Don’t search by the title of the article!