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Using Primary Source Documents in Historical Writing

Discover the importance of critically evaluating primary source documents in historical writing, uncovering their biases, motivations, and true meanings. Explore the significance of the Speaker, Occasion, Audience, Purpose, and Subject in understanding document validity.

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Using Primary Source Documents in Historical Writing

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  1. Using Primary Source Documents in Historical Writing

  2. Validity and Bias in Primary Source Documents • Never take a document at face value. • All documents have strengths and weaknesses that should be evaluated in forming your historical argument. • All documents contain biases. The historian’s job is to determine what those biases are so that the document can be effectively used in an historical essay.

  3. SOAPS A quick way to think about validity and bias in an historical document is to think about the circumstance surrounding the documents creation. Specifically: • Speaker • Occasion • Audience • Purpose • Subject

  4. Speaker • Who created the document? • What do you know about the person’s identity? (race, gender, class, age, job etc.) • How might their identity effect the document?

  5. Speaker • Northerner • Man • White • Professional Cartoonist

  6. Occasion • When was the document created? • What events were occurring historically that might effect the creation of the document?

  7. Occasion • “Bleeding Kansas” • Preston Brooks attack on Charles Sumner • Election year

  8. Audience • Who was the document created for? • Was the document meant to be public or private? • What do you know about the identity of the people or person it was created for? • What is the relationship between the Speaker and the audience?

  9. Audience • Literate White Northerners • Voters

  10. Purpose • Why was the document created? • What purpose does the document serve?

  11. Purpose • To sway public opinion or reinforce public opinion.

  12. Subject • What is the subject of the document? • Read between the lines. What is the true meaning of the document. • Message

  13. Subject • Preston Brooks is portrayed as animalistic (notice hair, tail, etc) • Charles Sumner well dressed, statesman. Only a quill to defend himself. • “Southern Chivalry” --sarcastic • “Argument versus Clubs”

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