Thank you to Jennifer Corbin for permission to use content from her research guide “Comprehensive Literature Review" (http://libguides.tulane.edu/c.php?g=182708&p=1204573), Howard-TiltonLibrary,Tulane University. And thank you to the University of Santa Cruz Library for permission to incorporate content from their guide "Write a Literature Review" (http://guides.library.ucsc.edu/write-a-literature-review).
A literature review is an overview of selected articles, books and other sources about a specific subject. The purpose is to summarize the existing research that has been done on the subject in order to put your research in context and to highlight what your research will add to the existing body of knowledge. Literature reviews are typically organized in some way (chronological, thematic, methodological).
Note that your literature review is separate from your works cited page or bibliography, although sources used in your literature review will need to be cited properly in them.
Let's take a look at an example of a literature review in an article, a dissertation, and a review article.
A literature review may constitute an essential chapter of a thesis or dissertation, or may be a self-contained review of writings on a subject. In either case, its purpose is to:
The literature review itself, however, does not present new primary scholarship.