Wednesday, November 6, 2019
Research Quality, Depth, and Credit
Research Quality, Depth, and Credit Quality The Newbery-winningà Indian Captive: The Story of Mary Jemisonà The librarians at Patterson Library in Westfield, New York, took my ten-year-old quest seriously and gave me access to the closed-off balcony with its stacks of dusty archived books. I spent weeks filling hundreds of three While I dropped the project, I had unconsciously absorbed the difference in primary, secondary, and tertiary sources. Those accounts written When using a written source, the primary is the original document. If you find something quoted in a resource, that resource should be saying where it came from ââ¬â follow that back to the original document. If thereââ¬â¢s no attribution, Iââ¬â¢ve found the quickest way to find an original source is to search the person or quote + searchable manuscripts. There are usually multiple hits. Look for websites from governments, libraries, universities, or other solid sources. Some examples: à à à Gutenberg Projectà over 58,000 free eBooks, including Victor Hugoââ¬â¢s memoirs. à à à The Library of Congress Manuscript Reading Roomà ââ¬â digital images or searchable text. à à à The British Libraryââ¬â¢s digitized collections. à à à Cambridge Digital Library à à à This page at Harvard Libraryà also tells you how to do more detailed research with them. Depth At Amazonââ¬â¢sà ââ¬Å"Look Insideâ⬠for Lenskiââ¬â¢s book, you can read the foreword, in which she describes how she researched the story and adapted it for fiction. She researched Jemisonââ¬â¢s entire life and the Iroquois (of whom the Seneca are a part) in depth. She talks about the fact it was a transitional time for the Iroquois and how she tried to address that. Her illustrations are modeled after traditional Seneca artwork. It is clear she knew as much as possible about Mary Jemison and the world in which she lived. However, while Lenskiââ¬â¢s writing was undoubtedly informed Credit Lenski mentions various specific resources throughout the foreword and ends with two paragraphs of thanks. As you do your research, keep track of key source information youââ¬â¢ll need for citations and bibliographies. The online writing lab at Purdue can help you give credit professionally if youââ¬â¢re writing nonfiction. If youââ¬â¢re writing fiction, share your sources with the reader and say thank you.
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