ABSTRACT

This essential collection of key articles offers a re-evaluation of the practice of history in light of current debates. Critical thinkers and practicing historians present their writings, along with clear and thorough editorial material, to examine the complex ideas at the forefront of historical practice.

This volume gives a synoptic overview of the last twenty-five years’ theoretical analysis of historical writing, with a critical examination of the central concepts and positions that have been in debate. The collection delineates the emergence of "practice theory" as a possible paradigm for future historical interpretation concerned with questions of agency, experience and the subject.

These complex ideas are introduced to students in this accessible reader, and for teachers and historians too, this survey is an indispensable and timely read.

part |63 pages

Discourse and the Problem of Social History

chapter |14 pages

The Determinist Fix

Some obstacles to the further development of the linguistic approach to history in the 1990s

part |79 pages

Self and Agency

part |87 pages

Experience and Practice

chapter |20 pages

Outline of the Theory of Practice

Structures and the habitus

chapter |11 pages

The Practice of Everyday Life

"Making do": uses and tactics

chapter |19 pages

Toward a Theory of Social Practices

A development in culturalist theorizing