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What is History?

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Title: What is History?


1
What is History?
  • The definition of history.  Webster's Third New
    International Dictionary gives three relevant
    definitions of the word "history"
  • a) "a narrative of events connected with a real
    or imaginary object, person, or career"
  • b)"the events that form the subject matter of a
    history"
  • c)"a systematic written account comprising a
    chronological record of events and usually
    including a philosophical explanation of the
    cause and origin of such events."
  • We note from these three descriptive definitions
    that the word "history" can mean either a record
    of events or the events themselves and it can
    also mean a narrative of real events or of
    imaginary events.

2
The Historical Method
  • Historical method basically involves four things
  • a) a technique of investigation
  • b) an ability to identify what really took place
  • c) knowledge of what others are affirming in
    one's own field, in cognate fields, and in allied
    disciplines
  • d) an ability to express correctly what one has
    ascertained

3
What is History?
  • History is about change and continuity over time
    and space. We study the past from many
    perspectives such as political, military and
    diplomatic developments, economic, social, and
    cultural development, and the role of religious
    ideas and beliefs in shaping human experiences.
  • The range of topics open to historians is
    virtually endless. Some historians deal with
    global issues like the rise of capitalism or the
    origins of WWI, others take a microhistorical
    approach and closely study a small sect or
    community within a carefully bounded period of
    time so as to recover deeply buried experiences
    and meanings.
  • The power of ideas in shaping past societies is a
    popular field, as is the impact of social and
    economic structures on such societies.
  • Historians study the origins of conflict as well
    as the impact that such conflicts have upon those
    caught up in them.
  • Some historians work on the very recent past the
    origins of ethnic cleansing for example, while
    others may study societies in the far distant
    past. Our geographical scope is just as
    wide-ranging, with historians in our department
    studying Canada, China, Europe, Latin America,
    the United States, Africa and India.  

4
History
  • With so many possible points of departure,
    historians must frequently look to other
    disciplines in the social sciences and the
    humanities to gain the necessary tools.
  • For example, a study of a community in a time of
    change can often benefit from detailed
    demographic analysis while someone studying a
    particular historical document could gain by
    employing techniques of literary analysis.
  • Hence, History emphasizes interdisciplinary
    approaches.
  • Training as an historian enables students to
    gather, organize and evaluate historical sources,
    understand complex cause and effect
    relationships, and to communicate this knowledge
    effectively.
  • History provides a unique awareness of the world
    from its origins to the present and gives
    excellent foundation for careers that require an
    understanding of human diversity as well as of
    how the past impinges on the present and the
    future.

5
What do Historians do?
  • By providing intensive training in research and
    writing, and by exposing students to a wide range
    of human experiences, history has proven to be an
    excellent foundation for many careers.
  • History prepares its students for a range of
    professions, including teaching in schools,
    colleges and universities, diplomatic service,
    law and business. History graduates also become
    journalists, archivists, and librarians. Others
    work in museums and historical sites.
  • People holding degrees in history can also be
    found in the corporate sector where their
    analytical and communication skills can be put to
    good use.
  •  

6
What will History do for me?
  • History degrees in particular, and history
    courses more generally, provide students with
    excellent skills and abilities such as critical
    and creative thinking, analysis of problems,
    effective oral and written communication, the
    gathering and organizing of information, logical
    calculation, abstract reasoning and its
    application, insight and intuition in generating
    knowledge, and interpretative and assessment
    skills.
  • An historian has the tools and knowledge
    necessary to undertake the following
  • identify a problem and determine the pertinent
    evidence
  • systematically locate and acquire written, oral
    and electronic evidence through libraries,
    archives, oral interviews, the internet and
    public institutions
  • critically assess the evidence
  • prepare oral and written presentations of the
    evidence and its subsequent analysis in order to
    address the original problem
  • provide a synthesis of the knowledge gained

7
Method of Historical Inquiry
  • Recall History is what we choose to remember
    about the past.
  • Interpret History involves explaining people and
    events.
  • 3). Apply Use what we know about the past to
    understand the present.
  • 4). Analyze History involves figuring out
    complicated situations.
  • 5). Synthesize History involves making sense
    out of jumble of facts.
  • 6). Evaluate History involves making judgments
    about people and events

8
                                                                                                                                                                                                           
       
                                                                                                                                                                                                           
9
What is History?
  • "History is the witness that testifies to the
    passing of time it illuminates reality,
    vitalizes memory, provides guidance in daily
    life, and brings us tidings of antiquity.
  • --Cicero

10
Quotes
  • This I regard as history's highest function, to
    let no worthy action be uncommemorated, and to
    hold out the reprobation of posterity as a terror
    to evil words and deeds. ----Tacitus

11
Impact Importance of History
  • All modern wars start in the history
    classroom --Anonymous
  • "God cannot change the past, but historians can."
    --Samuel Butler

12
Ignorance of History
  • What good fortune for those in power that people
    do not think nor do they read history
  • -- Adolf Hitler
  • "Demoralize the enemy from within by surprise,
    terror, sabotage, assassination these are the
    lessons of history and this is the war of the
    future..." - Adolf Hitler

13
Dangers of Ignoring History
  • "What experience and history teach is this--that
    people and governments never have learned
    anything from history, or acted on principles
    deduced from it."
  • --G. W. F. Hegel

14
Ignorance of History
  • While the mediocre European is obsessed with
    history, the mediocre American is ignorant of
    it.
  • --Anonymous

15
Historys Lessons
  • That men do not learn very much from the lessons
    of history is the most important of all the
    lessons that History has to teach --Aldous
    Huxley
  • Throughout history the world has been laid waste
    to ensure the triumph of conceptions that are now
    as dead as the men that died for them.
    --Henry De Montherlant

16
Versions of History
  • History's like a story in a way it depends on
    who's telling it.
  • --Dorothy Salisbury Davis
  • "If you do not like the past, change it."
  • --William L. Burton
  • "History . . . is indeed little more than the
    register of the crimes, follies, and misfortunes
    of mankind."
  • --Edward Gibbon

17
History Propaganda
  • History is the lie commonly agreed upon
  • --Voltaire

Who controls the past controls the future who
controls the present controls the
past --George Orwell
18
History Historians
  • History is simply a piece of paper covered with
    print the main thing is still to make history,
    not to write it.
  • --Otto von Bismarck
  • Anybody can make history only a great man can
    write it
  • --Oscar Wilde

19
PROBLEMS IN HISTORY
  • History as a discipline can be characterized as
    having a collective forgetfulness about women.
    --Clarice Stasz Stoll
  • War makes rattling good history but Peace is
    poor reading --Thomas Hardy

20
Historical Perspective (?)
  • Let others praise ancient times I am glad I was
    born in these --Ovid

21
Historical Perspective
  • "An historian should yield himself to his
    subject, become immersed in the place and period
    of his choice, standing apart from it now and
    then for a fresh view."
  • --Samuel Eliot Morison

22
The Value of Studying History
  • "Only a good-for-nothing is not interested in his
    past
  • --Sigmund Freud
  • "Every past is worth condemning"
  • --Friedrich Nietzsche

23
The Past is not the same as History
  • History requires evidence.
  • History is not everything that happened in the
    past, just the important things.
  • History is not merely a description of what
    happened in the past, but also an attempt to
    understand it.

24
Three Forms of Historical Writing
  • Generally speaking, historical interpretations
    can be presented in three different forms that
    correspond to the basic forms of historical
    writing 
  • 1. Argument An argumentative essay presents the
    interpretation in the form of a thesis and
    reasons for that thesis.
  • 2. Narrative A narrative essay presents the
    interpretation in the form of a narrative or
    story. 
  • 3. Description Descriptive essay gives a
    portrayal of a person, place or object at a
    particular moment in time.
  •  
  • Depending on the point to be made, a particular
    author might make use of only of these forms or
    might use different ones at different points in
    the work.

25
Historical Facts
  • But the facts of history cannot be repeated and
    tested like many facts in science.
  • Whether or not a mockingbird feather and a gold
    coin will fall at the same speed in a vacuum can
    be checked by experiment. They do. Every time. 
    But no one can replay the siege of the Alamo.
  • Yet, like most human statements, historical facts
    can be verified by confirming evidence and
    checked by consistency. Still, they have an
    unnerving way of remaining capable of being
    questioned and disputed.
  • For one thing, historical facts can be based on
    at least two kinds of sources primary and
    secondary.
  • Primary means a comment made by someone who was a
    witness or a participant in an event. A secondary
    source is a record made by someone not present at
    an event, but who uses primary and other
    secondary sources as evidence.

26
Facts Sources
  • A letter or an interview can be a primary record
    from someone who was an observer or a contributor
    when something happened. Of course, this does not
    guarantee truth. People can forgetor lieand the
    older a person becomes, as more time falls
    between event and recall, the more memories
    alter.
  • Most history books are secondary records. They
    can be moreor lessaccurate than first-person,
    primary accounts they can be reliable stories or
    sheer propaganda.
  • To complicate the issue, the questions one asks
    when using a record can determine whether a
    source is primary or secondary.

27
Facts or Fiction?
  • However defined, the facts of history are not
    fiction. In responsible history, an individual
    cannot simply decide that something did happen,
    or did not, without proof.
  • And proof in history comes from three sources at
    a minimum
  • 1) reliable witness,
  • 2) logical possibility, and
  • 3) observable causes and effects.
  • In addition, historical facts must be consistent
    with one another. All of them.

28
Facts Interpretations
  • Yet, the facts of history, most of the time, are
    really the least important things.
  • Certainly an invention, or the migration of a
    people, or a war of conquest, or the publication
    of a book, or the success of an assassination, or
    the result of an election can be significant.
    Such facts cause noticeable effects. But what
    these events and objects mean to people is much
    more important.
  • Human knowledge is built on interpretations of
    objects and events and people, whether
    experienced or heard about, whether self or
    others.
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