Wikipedia:Identifying and using primary sources: Difference between revisions

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Every source is the primary source for something, whether it be the name of the author, its title, its date of publication, and so forth. For example, no matter what kind of book it is, the [[copyright page]] inside the front of a book is a primary source for the date of the book's publication.
 
More importantly, many high-quality sources contain both primary and secondary material. A peer-reviewed journal article may begin by summarizing previously published work to place the new work in context (which is secondary material) before proceeding into a description of a novel idea (which is primary material). An author might write a book about an event that is based mostly on primary-source news stories, but he might add occasional information about personal experiences or new material from recent interviews. the book about love letters might analyze the letters (which is secondary material) and provide a transcription of the letters in an appendix (which is primary material). The work based on previously published sources is [[#Not a matter of counting the number of links in the chain|probably]] a secondary source; the new information is a primary source.
 
=="Secondary" is not another way to spell "good"==