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HIST288: Historical Voices of Oceania: Welcome!

Introduction

      

Between 1946 and 1958, the United States conducted 67 atomic bomb tests in the Marshall Islands, rendering some islands uninhabitable and causing lasting health impacts on the Marshallese people. Meanwhile, between 1952 and 1991, the United Kingdom conducted 47 tests in Australia and Christmas Island, while France conducted 193 nuclear tests between 1966 and 1996 in French Polynesia, including 41 atmospheric detonations. These testing programs gave rise to the Nuclear Free and Independent Pacific (NFIP) movement in 1975.

Some key organizations

These organizations are often association with nuclear testing (and resistance to it) in the Pacific. Click on the highlighted name to view search results for these organization names in OneSearch (the library's online catalog):

Nuclear Free and Independent Pacific (NFIP)

Pacific Concerns Resource Centre

Nuclear Claims Tribunal

Other Useful Library Guides

These online guides also apply to the HIST288 assignments:

Primary and Secondary Sources

Distinguishing between "primary" and "secondary" sources can initially be confusing, but there are some relatively straightforward ways to tell the difference (although it should be noted that there are always exceptions to these rules--when in doubt, ask your instructor ... or a librarian!):

Primary sources are first-hand accounts of an event or time period. They represent original thinking, reports on discoveries or events, or they can share new information. Often these sources are created at the time the events occurred. 

Secondary sources involve analysis, synthesis, interpretation, or evaluation of primary sources, and are usually created some time after the events in question took place. They often attempt to describe, explain or distill primary sources of information.

Some examples of primary Hawai'i- and Pacific-related resources include:

  • diaries, correspondence, ships' logs

  • 18th and 19th century published voyaging accounts;

  • interviews, speeches, oral histories, autobiographies

  • government documents

  • creative art works, literature

  • newspaper articles and advertisements

  • photographs

Examples of secondary sources include:

  • textbooks

  • dictionaries and encyclopedias

  • biographies

  • scholarly writing (theses and dissertations, or journal articles

  • writing about literature, art works or music
     

Examples of sources that are sometimes primary source and sometimes secondary source materials:

  • Newspapers: An article published in 1893 regarding the overthrow of the Hawaiian Kingdom is a primary source document (because it was written at the time the events it discusses were unfolding); an article published 50 years later, which is either written by someone who was witness to the events of 1893 or includes interviews with people who were there, is a also a primary source document (because it includes first-hand information, being published for the first time). An article on the same subject published in 2020 is a secondary source, which (if the author is a good historian) would rely on primary source documents to recreate the history of those events. For more on newspapers, click here.)
  • Early maps: Maps can sometimes be considered a primary source, in that they can document events as they were unfolding, in the same way a newspaper article can sometimes be a primary source. (For more on maps, click here.)