Skip to sidebar after main content

War and Genocide in Europe, 1939-1945: Research Seminar

This Library course guide will help students identify primary source material (e.g., ghetto diaries and memoirs, survivor testimonies and interviews, photographs, etc.) related to the life in the ghettos of Nazi occupied Europe, including labour, living conditions, food policies and hunger, resistance, smuggling, police and leadership. 

Course Number: HI615B

Subject: History

Where are the primary sources?

  1. Physical (one-of-a-kind)
    1. personal, archives and museums
  2. Surrogate (published)
    1. Analogue
      • books, microfiche, microfilm (and ebooks as discreet publications) 
    2. Digital 
      • commercial or not-for-profit databases

Surrogate primary sources have the potential to be translated and searchable.

Analogue primary sources

To search a library catalogue for primary sources, use some of these terms in addition to your search terms (e.g., ghetto AND holocaust):

  • "personal narratives," sources, letters, correspondence, speeches, interviews

Searching the following two catalogues should find the majority of available sources.

  • Omni - owned by academic libraries in Ontario (not UofT)
  • Worldcat - owned by academic libraries in the world (including UofT)

Request an item from another library (Interlibrary Loan)

Bonus! The Internet Archive may have a digitized copy of a print book.

Catalogue records do not consistently apply subject headings, so an additional approach is to mine bibliographies of secondary sources, including theses and dissertations. For example:

Riegel, J. E. M. (2021). Catastrophe and continuity: Musical life in the warsaw ghetto (Order No. 28548098). Available from ProQuest Dissertations & Theses Global.

Digital primary sources

Commercial

Laurier, UG, and UW have many commercial primary source collections, however none of them are helpful for the content of this course.

  • i.e., if you Google and come across any of these Gale products, we do not have access.

not-for-profit 

Ways to search google ("primary sources", interview)

A selective list of freely available digital primary source collections. Note that many of these collections include content in its original language; and that there are commentaries, essays, and other text that is secondary.

Citing primary sources

Also:

  • You can also emulate what you see in other publications.
  • 14.160: Citations taken from secondary sources

Page Owner: Greg Sennema

Page Feedback

Last Updated: