ABSTRACT

Since the turn of the twenty-first century, family history is the place where two great oceans of research are meeting: family historians outside the academy, with traditionally trained, often university-employed historians. This collection is both a testament to dialogue and an analysis of the dynamics of recent family history that derives from the confluence of professional historians with family historians, their common causes and conversations. It brings together leading and emerging Australian and New Zealand scholars to consider the relationship between family history and the discipline of history, and the potential of family history to extend the scope of historical inquiry, even to revitalise the discipline. In Anglo-Western culture, the roots of the discipline’s professionalisation lay in efforts to reconstruct history as objective knowledge, to extend its subject matter and to enlarge the scale of historical enquiry. Family history, almost by definition, is often inescapably personal and localised. How, then, have historians responded to this resurgence of interest in the personal and the local, and how has it influenced the thought and practice of historical enquiry?

part I|93 pages

Family, History, Historians

chapter 1|20 pages

Family History and the Academy

A ‘Turn’ or a Tradition?

chapter 2|17 pages

Family Life and the Creation of Conscience

The Macarthurs, 1780–1860

chapter 3|13 pages

The Extended Ken of Kin

A National Family History

chapter 5|21 pages

Writing Family, Writing Nation in 1988

Inside the National Library of Australia’s Self-Published Family History Collection

part II|68 pages

Critical Historiography

chapter 6|14 pages

Private Lives, Public History

Contemplating Intimate and Collective Historical Consciousness in Australia

chapter 7|14 pages

Out of the Shadows

Family Silence and the National Imaginary

part III|46 pages

Teaching and Learning Family History

chapter 11|14 pages

Diploma of Family History

A Personal and Institutional History

chapter 12|12 pages

Family History

Community and Collaboration