The Fourth Edition of our highly affordable and convenient text remains an excellent tool for students faced with the daunting task of writing their first research paper or historiographical essay. The book begins with a chapter that describes the different schools of thought of history, setting the stage for a discussion of the different types of historical sources and the organization of the historical profession. Then Going to the Sources becomes a hands-on manual, helping the reader identify, find, and evaluate the many sources available to researchers. In addition to enhanced coverage of technological tools, this fourth edition features an entirely new chapter, "Getting the Most Out of History Books," practical advice to help students read more critically. New and updated appendices provide easy examples of style for footnotes, endnotes, and bibliographical entries, as well as a list of commonly used abbreviations.
The greater chunk of this book details strategies for research and writing of history.
For anyone who is interested in either of those actions, this is a must-read. Terrific, brief, and informative. Brundage expresses a passion for teaching others that makes this little book into a charismatic manual rather than the dry collection of chapters that others might expect it to be.
This book was a required book for one of my classes this term. I found it to be pretty boring, but it was useful for a few of the assignments I have coming up. The best thing I can say about it is that it was around 100 pages and I finished it.
Love the first chapter especially, detailing the various recent schools of history. Also very good on sources, etc. Well written, lively, brisk and efficient. I hope my interdisciplinary students see this text as far more than a formal "history" text (as it is named)--I sure do. Great resources for lit reviews, humanities research at large.
As a guide, it's extremely useful for improving your skills in historical researching and writing. My main issue with the book is as other reviewers have mentioned, a lot of the information is somewhat outdated by today's digital standards.
There was one chapter I found to be useful in finding sources, but for the most part, much of the advice is more for academics already in academia as opposed to people outside of academia who want to do research. Not a bad book, but the advice is either obvious, dated, or limited.
A good resources for undergrads, though it could use updating. It's unrealistic to expect undergrads to use index cards when there are so many digital solutions available.
Brundage's book is not nearly as detailed as Presnell's - however, its written from a far more approachable perspective. Where Presnell gets overly technical, Brundage writes from a down-to-earth perspective. Very accessible format for the under-graduate student, but may not have enough information to be helpful for the graduate student. However, given that Brundage's defined audience IS the under-graduate - his methodology is a home-run in that regard.
As a research guide this is now outdated, due to the advent of the internet, but the sections on different schools of thought and how to write different types of paper are still useful guides for beginning historians.
Useful. I work in a library, so some of the information was repetitive (it was required for a graduate history research class) but it was very user friendly, unlike a lot of books geared towards telling someone how to do their research.
I read this book as part of a Senior Seminar class for my bachelors in history. The book was rather interesting and kept me wanting to read more so I would give it a rating of 4 stars.