Document Analysis
Instructions and Information
Please use the document analysis form to prepare and submit your assignment. Please see below for information about primary sources. I have provided two excellent online archives and four printed collections. You must use one (or more) of these!
Primary sources provide the basic data for historical study. Historians examine and interpret their sources. Any argument for a thesis must build on evidence contained in primary sources. In each document analysis, you will try your hand at the identification and evaluation of primary sources.
Historians must decide what kinds of sources are (a) available, (b) relevant, and (c) reasonably reliable for their purposes. In this class you won't have to worry about (a) because you will work with sources already identified. But you will have to think about (b) and (c).
Relevance: is this source relevant to an understanding of, e.g., the Salem Witch Trials, or to some particular aspect of them? If so, how? A list of Salem Village residents is likely to be highly relevant, while tax records from Egypt are not likely to be so. Be sure to say why you think as you do.
Reliability: are we reasonably confident that the source is genuine (i.e., not a forgery?) In what ways does potential bias limit the weight it can have in our argument? For example, does a court record contain verbatim testimony, or a digest of what supposedly was said? Does a letter reflect the viewpoint of a reasonably impartial observer, or of a deeply engaged participant? Does the source raise questions that can only be answered by examining other sources?
The Analysis
Components of document analysis include:
Salem Witchcraft: Primary Sources
Online Resources
"The Salem Witch Trials: Documentary, Archive, and Transcription Project."
University of Virginia
http://etext.lib.virginia.edu/salem/witchcraft/
Famous American Trials: Salem Witchcraft Trials, 1692
Douglas Linder, University of Missouri, Kansas City, Law School
http://www.law.umkc.edu/faculty/projects/ftrials/salem/salem.htm>
Print Resources
Boyer, Paul, and Stephen Nissenbaum, ed. Salem Village Witchcraft: A Documentary Record of Local Conflict in Colonial New England. Boston: Northeastern University Press, 1993.
Burr, George Lincoln. Narratives of the Witchcraft Cases, 1648-1706. New York: Barnes and Noble, n.d.
Cooper, James F, Jr., and Kenneth P. Minkema, ed. The Sermon Notebook of Samuel Parris, 1689-1694. Boston: Colonial Society of Massachusetts, 1993.
Trask, Richard B. "The Devil hath been raised": A Documentary Record of the Salem Village Witchcraft Outbreak of 1692. Danvers, MA: Yeoman Press, 1992.