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HIST 150: Southern LGBTQ+ Theatre Research (Fall 2025)

What is a Secondary Source?

In History, a secondary source is a work written about, but after, a historical event. This may include:

  • Academic articles
  • Books
  • Biographies
  • Magazine articles
  • Interviews years later

Scholarly and Peer Reviewed Sources

In Academe, we are especially interested in a specific type of secondary source: Peer Reviewed Publications.

But what's the difference between scholarly, peer reviewed, popular, or refereed?

Scholarly: A source written by an expert, but not subjected to the peer review process. 
Example: magazine articles (if written by expert), public presentations, reviews, opinion pieces.

Refereed: Academic work that has some level of vetting, usually by an editor or panel. 
Example: Conference papers, journal articles that are approved by an editor but not external reviewers.
NOTE: refereed is often used interchangeably with Peer Reviewed by databases, but it isn't always the same.

Popular: Written for a wide readership. May or may not be written by a subject expert.
Examples: newspaper or magazine, popular press books, websites.

Peer Reviewed: Academic books and articles written by a specialist, reviewed by other experts, and published by an academic press.
Examples: Articles in academic journals, some conference papers, books published  by university presses.

Chapters!

Many topics in this class are too broad to be articles but not broad enough to be books. For many topics, you will want to look at chapters in a book. Examples