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  • - [David] Hello readers.

  • I just got back from the library with these.

  • Books.

  • "Oh, big surprise," you say.

  • I went to the library.

  • I found two books.

  • No, I get it, but these books will help us talk

  • about the difference between a first and secondhand account.

  • You see, this is a travel diary written by a young man

  • on the Oregon Trail like 150 years ago.

  • Whereas this is a book about the Oregon Trail

  • written last year.

  • A firsthand account is created by the person

  • who experienced an event.

  • Firsthand accounts are also called primary sources.

  • Primary is another way to say first or original.

  • It uses pronouns like I or me.

  • It's told from one person's perspective.

  • A secondhand account is more distant from the event,

  • like a book or a newspaper article.

  • The author wasn't there but they used

  • firsthand accounts like interviews,

  • diaries, photos, or video recordings

  • to stitch the story together.

  • The story uses pronouns like they, she, or he,

  • not I or we.

  • Let me show you more specifically by comparing

  • these two passages.

  • Okay, so this one, our firsthand account,

  • comes from "The Diary of Horace Griggs",

  • our young migrant on the Oregon Trail.

  • "July 18th, 1871.

  • "We're in the Wyoming territory now,

  • "and it's been a few days since we had good water.

  • "I'm starting to worry.

  • "It's been at least a week since any of us

  • "saw a tree.

  • "But the buffalo chips remain plentiful.

  • "At least the darn things burn hot."

  • And here's the excerpt from a secondary source,

  • our book about the Oregon Trail

  • that came out last year.

  • "The Oregon Trail didn't have many trees.

  • "The pioneers used buffalo chips,

  • "dried buffalo dung,

  • "as fuel for their fires.

  • "In fact, some children played games with buffalo chips.

  • "they tossed them around like Frisbees."

  • So we've got here two passages both about buffalo droppings,

  • good job me.

  • Let me be clear.

  • It's not gross.

  • They're mostly made of dried grass, honestly.

  • What are the big differences between these two passages?

  • Look at how Horace uses first person pronouns

  • like I, or we, or us.

  • He's telling the story from his perspective

  • and the perspective of other people traveling with him.

  • It's like he's telling us a story.

  • And it's his story to tell.

  • He was right there starting fires with buffalo chips.

  • We can see how he felt about not having access to water.

  • He was worried.

  • Firsthand accounts connect us more closely

  • with the emotions of the writer.

  • And because he was there, he can accurately describe

  • his experiences.

  • However, this guy can only describe

  • his own experience

  • He doesn't know what it was like in other wagon trains.

  • He doesn't know what it was like to be a Native community

  • encountering these settlers.

  • He's writing from one perspective,

  • and it's his perspective.

  • Now look at the second passage.

  • It uses the pronouns their and they

  • to refer to the pioneers and their kids.

  • What does that tell us?

  • The writer is not part of the group,

  • wasn't there, doesn't consider themselves

  • part of the us the way that Horace considers himself

  • part of an us.

  • The author is more distant.

  • It's not the author's individual story.

  • Instead, they're trying to tell the stories

  • of other people through research.

  • This is what makes it a secondary source,

  • a secondhand account.

  • Because secondhand accounts are more distant

  • from the events they describe,

  • they're usually less emotional.

  • The author of this second passage, for example,

  • isn't worried about anything that's happening

  • to the pioneers.

  • They're not even referring to a specific set of pioneers.

  • They're talking about what these migrants did in general.

  • They're giving you background knowledge, general knowledge.

  • That kind of distance lets the author

  • of a secondhand account cover more ground.

  • They don't have to stick to the narrative

  • of one family or one person, or even one moment in time.

  • First and secondhand accounts are both important.

  • When I was a kid, they used to advertise

  • sugary cereals as part of a balanced breakfast.

  • Little bowl of sugary cereal, a glass of milk,

  • a bowl of fruit, maybe a sausage, some toast.

  • Well, think of primary and secondary sources

  • as part of a balanced information diet.

  • A little of column A, a little of column B.

  • You just gotta take your knowledge spoon

  • and dig in deep into your perspectives bowl.

  • That's a thing that I made up just now.

  • Diversity of perspectives does a body good.

  • You can learn anything.

  • David out.

- [David] Hello readers.

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B1 中級

初・中古アカウント|リーディング|カーンアカデミー (First and secondhand accounts | Reading | Khan Academy)

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    林宜悉 に公開 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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