ABSTRACT

In recent years, the focus of historians of economic thought has changed to also include the ideas and practices of contemporary economists. This has opened up new questions regarding the utilization of sources, choice of method, narrative styles, and ethical issues, as well as a new awareness of the historian’s place, role, and task.

This book brings together leading contributors to provide, for the first time, a methodological overview of the historiography of economics. Emphasising the quality of the scholarship of recent decades, the book seeks to provide research tools for future historians of economic thought, as well as to any historians of social science with an interest in historiographic issues.

chapter |6 pages

Introduction

part I|66 pages

Memories in action

chapter 3|20 pages

Interviews

Some methodological and historiographical issues of oral sources

chapter 4|16 pages

The witness seminar

Method, results, and implications

part II|46 pages

Quantitative histories of economics

chapter 5|25 pages

Social network analysis

A complementary method of discovery for the history of economics

chapter 6|18 pages

Prosopography

The missing link in the history of economics

part III|36 pages

Histories of the teaching of economics

part IV|52 pages

Material histories of economics

chapter 10|15 pages

Reading popular histories of economics

chapter 11|15 pages

Detectives, storytellers, and hackers

Historians of economics in an age of social media