ABSTRACT

A follow-up to the bestselling The Pursuit of History, this Reader brings together the reflections of a number of major historians on the nature and purpose of their craft.

They illuminate the different governing assumptions - political, social, personal - that have sustained these leading practitioners in their studies, and show how different influences and methodologies have impacted on them.

In so doing, the book not only gives an insight into the great variety of aspirations and convictions that animate History as a discipline, but also brings into focus the key historiographic trends of the English-speaking world since World War II. Key themes which are highlighted include:

The nation
Marxism
People's history
Structural history
Gender
Race
Quantitative history

Ranging widely from the earlier traditions and schools to the wake of postmodernism, authors represented include Braudel, Carr, Elton, Himmelfarb, Hobsbawm, Scott and Zeldin.

This Reader provides the core reading for all History and Theory courses.


chapter |16 pages

Introduction

part |2 pages

Part One: History for its own Sake

chapter |12 pages

Fidelity to the sources

chapter |14 pages

Empathy and imagination

part |2 pages

Part Two: Political Histories

chapter |14 pages

History as progress

chapter |20 pages

The nation

chapter |24 pages

Marxism

part |2 pages

Part Three: The New Radicalism

chapter |26 pages

History from below

chapter |24 pages

Gender

chapter |24 pages

Postcolonialism

part |2 pages

Part Four: Learning from Historical Perspective

chapter |10 pages

Persistence and change

chapter |16 pages

Beyond stereotypes

chapter |18 pages

Qualified predictions

part |2 pages

Part Five: History as Social Science

chapter |16 pages

New questions, new concepts

chapter |14 pages

The authority of numbers

chapter |26 pages

Reactions

part |2 pages

Part Six: The Cultural Turn

chapter |28 pages

The impact of Postmodernism

chapter |16 pages

The new Cultural History

chapter |16 pages

Memory and culture

part |3 pages

Part Seven: Beyond Academia

chapter 42|6 pages

H.R. Trevor-Roper

chapter 43|6 pages

Gerda Lerner