ABSTRACT

Although historical research undertaken in different disciplines often requires speculation and imagination, it remains relatively rare for scholars to foreground these processes explicitly as a knowing method. Historical Research, Creative Writing, and the Past brings together researchers in a wide array of disciplines, including literary studies and history, ethnography, design, film, and sound studies, who employ imagination, creativity, or fiction in their own historical scholarship or who analyze the use of imagination, creativity, or fiction to make historical claims by others. This volume is organized into four topical sections related to representations of the past—textual and conceptual approaches; material and emotional approaches; speculative and experiential approaches; and embodied methodologies—and covers a variety of temporal periods and geographical contexts. Reflecting on the methodological, theoretical, and ethical underpinnings of writing history creatively or speculatively, the essays situate themselves within current debates over epistemology and interdisciplinarity. They yield new insights into historical research methods, including archival investigations and source criticisms, while offering readers tangible examples of how to do history differently.

chapter |12 pages

Introduction

Methods of Knowing

part Section I|69 pages

Textual and Conceptual Approaches

chapter 1|29 pages

Epic Posturing and Epic Entanglements

Historiography, Creative Inquiry, and the Writing of the Self in Boiardo, Montaigne, and Cervantes

chapter 2|21 pages

‘The Machine for Showing Desire’

Desert Romance Fiction and Knowing Sexual Desire

part Section II|66 pages

Material and Emotional Approaches

chapter 4|27 pages

Filling in the Blanks

An Open Door Invitation to a Nineteenth-Century American Period Room

chapter 5|18 pages

Scraps of History

Vernacular Archiving and Creative Composition

part Section III|46 pages

Speculative and Experiential Approaches

chapter 8|15 pages

All Cops Are Biased

Historiography as Detective Story

chapter 9|14 pages

Sound Puppets

Using Sonic Non-fiction to Perform the Past

part Section IV|58 pages

Embodied Methodologies

chapter 10|16 pages

Co-imagining the History of a Village

Autoethnographer as Verbalizer of Experience-Based Knowledge

chapter 11|15 pages

My Writing Journey with the Webers

chapter 12|25 pages

Knowing Hands

Using Tactile Research Methods in Researching and Writing the History of Design