Examples:
diaries
correspondence
photographs and illustrations
maps
newspaper articles from the time period
manuscripts
pamphlets
broadsides, posters and other ephemera
autobiographical materials
interview or speech transcripts
oral histories
government documents (laws, bills, proceedings, acts, census records, etc.)
Context is everything: distinguishing between the three types of sources (primary, secondary and tertiary) will vary according to context and situation. For example, if you are analyzing how African American history was depicted in middle school textbooks in the 1980s, then the textbooks would be considered a primary source rather than a tertiary one.
Discipline | Primary Source |
Art | creative artifacts: drawings, paintings, sculpture etc. |
Music | sheet music, recordings |
English | play, poem or novel |
Political Science | treaties, congressional record |
Sciences | report/article documenting an original experiment/study |
Film/Television | script, video recording, film |
Some of this content adapted from: https://www.lib.vt.edu/help/research/primary-secondary-tertiary.html
Primary Source Repositories at USC:
AM (Formerly Adam Matthew Primary Source Collections)
Primary source collections from archives around the world. Collection themes include area studies, cultural studies, empire and globalism, ethnic studies, gender and sexuality, history, politics, literature, theatre, and war and conflict.
Collections of Note:
Manuscripts (these cover a variety of subject areas)