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Historiography

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Title: Studying History Author: Kevin Last modified by: Kevin Created Date: 9/4/2002 12:25:16 AM Document presentation format: On-screen Show Company – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Historiography


1
Historiography Historical Interpretation
  • K.J. Benoy

2
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

3
What is History?
  • History is, indeed, little more than the
    register of the crimes, follies and misfortunes
    of mankind.
  • Edward Gibbon

4
What is History?
  • History is a myth we all agree to believe.
  • Napoleon

5
What is History?
  • History is the Essence of innumerable
    biographies.
  • Thomas Carlyle

6
What is History?
  • History isthe development towards the
    consciousness of freedom as expressed in the
    political, cultural and religious institutions of
    a nation ---Volksgeist
  • G.W.F. Hegel

7
What is History?
  • History is more or less bunk.
  • Henry Ford

8
What is History?
  • History, Stephen said, is a nightmare from
    which I am trying to awake.
  • James Joyce

9
What is History?
  • The past is useless. That explains why it is
    past.
  • Wright Morris

10
What is History?
  • Hardly a pure science, history is closer to
    animal husbandry than it is to mathematics, in
    that it involves selective breeding. The
    principal difference between the husbandryman and
    the historian is that the former breeds sheep or
    cows or such, and the latter breeds (assumed)
    facts. The husbandryman uses his skills to enrich
    the future the historian uses his to enrich the
    past. Both are usually up to their ankles in
    bullst."
  • Tom Robbins

11
What is History?
  • History is something that never happened told by
    someone who wasn't there.
  • Ramon Gomez de la Serna

12
What is History?
  • There can be no history of the past as it
    actually did happen there can only be historical
    interpretations, and none of them final, and
    every generation has to frame its own.
  • Karl Popper

13
What is History?
  • History deals not only with the lives of great
    individualsit may be said to consist of the
    sediment of the lives of millions of smaller men
    and women who have left no name, but who have
    made their contribution.
  • A. L. Rowse

14
What is History?
  • The study of the past has never been static. The
    practice of history has witnessed many shifts and
    turns in the way it is thought and undertaken.
    Since the 1960s, for example, the discipline of
    history has experienced a 'social science turn',
    a 'cliometric' or 'statistics turn', a 'women's
    history turn', a 'cultural history turn' and so
    on. These are not novelties that have not come
    and gone. Each has remained a significant way for
    historians to reflect upon and write about change
    over time.
  • Alun Munslow

15
What is History?
Gary Larson The Far Side
16
Why Study History
  • The study of history is the best medicine for a
    sick mind for in history you have a record of
    the infinite variety of human experience plainly
    set out for all to see and in that record you
    can find yourself and your country both examples
    and warnings fine things to take as models, base
    things rotten through and through, to avoid.
  • Livy

17
Why Study History?
  • Time in its irresistible and ceaseless flow
    carries along on its flood all created things and
    drowns them in the depths of obscurity. . . . But
    the tale of history forms a very strong bulwark
    against the stream of time, and checks in some
    measure its irresistible flow, so that, of all
    things done in it, as many as history has taken
    over it secures and binds together, and does not
    allow them to slip away into the abyss of
    oblivion."
  • Anna Commena

18
Why Study History?
  • What is past is prologue.
  • William Shakespeare

19
Why Study History
  • Life must be lived forward, but understood
    backward.
  • Kierkegaard

20
Why Study History?
  • Die Weltgeschichte ist das Weltgericht. (World
    history is the worlds court of judgement.)
  • Friedrich von Schiller

21
Why Study History?
  • The function off the historian is neither to
    love the past nor to emancipate himself from the
    past, but to master and understand it as the key
    to the understanding of the present."
  • E.H. Carr

22
Why Study History
  • There are human truths to be derived from
    history, and truths well worth the telling, some
    large, some small, some general, some technical.
    Some, if not the most important, of the problems
    which face society today are not new ones there
    are similarities and analogies in the past. Any
    process which increases mans awareness of
    himself, that strengthens his chance of
    controling himself and his environment, is well
    worth pursuingThe purpose of historical
    investigation is to produce answers, in the form
    of concepts and generalizations to the
    fundamental problems of historical change in the
    social activities of men.
  • J.H. Plumb

23
Why Study History?
  • To give an accurate description of what has
    never occurred is not merely the proper
    occupation of the historian, but the inalienable
    privilege of any man of parts and culture.
  • Oscar Wilde

24
Why Study History?
  • what happened in the past influences what
    happens in the present, and, indeed, what will
    happen in the future, so that knowledge of the
    past history is essential to society.
  • Arthur Marwick

25
Why Study History
  • By enabling us to know about other centuries and
    other cultures, it provides, along with the
    collections housed in our great museums and
    galleries, the best antidote to the temporal
    parochialism which assumes that the only time is
    now, and the geographical parochialism which
    assumes that the only place is here. There is not
    only here and now there is there and there is
    then. And the best guide to there and then, and
    thus also the best guide to here and now, is
    history in part because it helps us understand
    how our world got to be the way it is in part
    because it helps us understand how other worlds
    got to be the way they were -- and the way they
    are.
  • David Cannadine

26
Why Study History?
  • If you do not like the past, change it.
  • William L. Burton

27
Why Study History?
  • History will be kind to me for I intend to write
    it.
  • Winston Churchill

28
Why Study History?
  • The value of history is, indeed, not scientific
    but moral by liberalizing the mind, by deepening
    the sympathies, by fortifying the will, it
    enables us to control, not society, but ourselves
    -- a much more important thing it prepares us to
    live more humanely in the present and to meet
    rather than to foretell the future.
  • Carl Becker

29
Why Study History
  • One reason why history rarely repeats itself
    among historically conscious people is that the
    dramatis personae are aware at the second
    performance of the denouement of the first, and
    their action is affected by that knowledge.
  • Edward Hallett Carr

30
Why Study History
  • "Historical knowledge enables us to place our
    perceptions of the contemporary world into a
    meaningful context and to discern the
    cause-and-effect relationships between events
    that serve as the basis for future expectations.
    Without such knowledge we would be as bewildered
    as a quarterback entering the fourth quarter of a
    football game without knowing the score, the
    amount of elapsed time, or the successes and
    failures of plays and players.
  • Allan J. Lichtman and Valerie French

31
Why Study History?
  • People are always shouting they want to create a
    better future. It's not true. The future is an
    apathetic void of no interest to anyone. The past
    is full of life, eager to irritate us, provoke
    and insult us, tempt us to destroy or repaint it.
    The only reason people want to be masters of the
    future is to change the past."
  • Milan Kundera

32
The Historical Approach
  • How can we understand anything of other people
    or ourselves, if we know nothing of history?
    The historian shows us how change has worked in
    the past and helps us to understand the present
    and make educated guesses about the future.

33
Historiography
  • Historiography is the writing of history.
  • It is what historians do.
  • Historians vary widely in what they feel is
    significant and important about the past.

34
Historiography
  • Students of history must examine not only the
    past, but those who write about it.
  • Study the historian before you begin to study
    the facts. The facts are really not at all like
    fish on a fishmongers slab. They are like fish
    swimming about in a vast and sometimes
    inaccessible ocean and what the historian
    catches will depend partly on chance, but mainly
    on what part of the ocean he chooses to fish in
    and what tackle he chooses to use these two
    factors being, of course, determined by the kind
    of fish he wants to catch. Edward Hallett Carr

35
Job 1 Finding the Facts
  • What are facts?
  • Which facts are important?
  • Are facts enough to explain the past?
  • The historian investigates facts and selects
    relevant ones. This is an art and not a science.

36
Job 2 Identifying Bias
  • Bias is the slant one puts on things.
  • It can be deliberate or unintentional.
  • All writing contains bias.
  • Identify it by looking at the types of words
    used. How are the words meant?
  • Every age contains its own biases. These make
    understanding past thinking difficult but not
    impossible. Historical imagination is needed.

37
Job 3 Dispensing With the Rubbish
Identifying Important and Answerable Questions.
  • Sources must be selected critically.
  • Topics need to be limited.
  • Primary and secondary sources must be consulted.
  • Value judgments are made.
  • Conclusions must be based on the weight of
    evidence.
  • Variations in interpretations should be
    understood and accepted.

38
Types of Sources
  • Primary Sources were produced at the time an
    event occurred and are directly connected to the
    events. Examples are
  • Photographs
  • Memos
  • Dispatches
  • Cartoons
  • Newspaper articles
  • Art works
  • Literary works

39
Types of Sources
  • Secondary sources are sources produced after the
    fact looking back on the events with the
    benefit of hindsight. They offer an analysis or
    restatement of primary source material. Examples
    include
  • Textbooks.
  • Books about art or literature
  • Movies
  • Documentaries

40
Job 4 Presenting an Account
  • Historians share their work and present it for
    criticism.
  • Books and essays are the chief written forms.
  • Accounts are narrative or analytical.

41
finis
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