ABSTRACT

First published in 2006. History and politics are fundamentally connected – indeed historians themselves have often made links between the two explicit. Making Histories explores the relationship between history and politics as it has developed in histories which are critical of the dominant, academic traditions of history writing, and makes a substantial contribution to the debate about the most appropriate way to handle the relations between theory and history. Part One is concerned with the development of ‘people’s history’ – a social history with popular sympathies and links with radical politics. Three phases are discussed: the work of the Hammonds, the Communist Party Historians’ Group of the 1950s, and the historical-political projects of E. P. Thompson. Part Two focuses on the relation between history and theory within Marxism generally and argues that philosophical and methodological assumptions play a key role in more narrowly empirical and historical debates. Part Three presents discussions of three newer forms of political history writing which take a more ‘popular’ turn: oral history, the public construction of the national past in the form of National Heritage or community, and a feminist assessment of histories of the suffragette movement. In challenging received opinion about the scope of ‘history’, the authors stress that historiography is concerned not with the past, but with the relation between the past and the present and argue that popular conceptions of history have an importance usually denied or ignored by academic historians.

part 1|118 pages

Historians and ‘the people'

chapter 2|52 pages

‘The people' in history

The Communist Party Historians' Group, 1946–56 *

part 2|71 pages

Marxist theory and historical analysis

chapter 4|20 pages

Philosophy and history

Some issues in recent marxist theory

chapter 5|49 pages

Reading for the best Marx

History–writing and historical abstraction

part 3|122 pages

Autobiography/memory/tradition

chapter 6|48 pages

Popular memory

Theory, politics, method

chapter 7|50 pages

‘Charms of residence'

The public and the past

chapter 8|22 pages

‘The public face of feminism'

Early twentieth-century writings on women's suffrage