ABSTRACT

This collection brings together fifteen essays from practitioners of a variety of disciplines that concern themselves with the past, not only historians, but scholars from other branches of the humanities and social sciences (including theology, art history, public history, and archival science) and natural sciences (including geology, paleontology, astronomy, and paleoanthropology).

What is the relationship between the past and the present? This essential and seemingly straightforward question, of central importance to many fields of study, in fact yields a variety of answers, with significant repercussions for methodology, epistemology, and pedagogy. This volume’s contributors describe how they relate phenomena in the past and their observations of the present, revealing intellectual resonances and opportunities for dialogue across subjects that are too often walled off from one another. By engaging scholars in a conversation about a first principle of their work, this book offers a genuinely interdisciplinary consideration of a timeless question, with implications for knowledge about both past and present.

Engaging with the Past and Present is full of insights and ideas for anyone seeking to understand the past or employ it as evidence for understanding present realities.

chapter 1|16 pages

Engaging With the Past and Present

An Introduction

part One|49 pages

Past, Present, and History

part Two|104 pages

Cultures Past and Present

chapter 9|26 pages

The Continuum Between Past and Present

An Art Historian's View

chapter 10|15 pages

Digging Into the Human Past

Archaeology, Time, and the Object

chapter 11|13 pages

Archives

Preserving the Documentary Past

part Three|58 pages

The Past, Present, and Natural History

chapter 12|7 pages

Imagining Earth Time

chapter 14|11 pages

The Past and Present of the Cosmos

chapter 15|12 pages

Disengaging With the Past

Extinction and Resets of the Biosphere 1