|
|
Books > Humanities > History > Theory & methods
Whether it's creating their own teachable moments in costume or
coaching students, many educators want to use historic characters
in the classroom but lack strategies and resources. The types of
questions they ask are answered in Living History in the Classroom:
Performance and Pedagogy by outstanding content experts with
practical insights into performance, public history, and education.
The conceptual framework is based on an instructional model of
performance pedagogy, developed by observing outstanding historical
character portrayals and analyzing them based on intent, content
and action. Written by master teachers and professionals who
collaborate nationwide with teachers and students, this work is
designed to help educators use the powerful tools of storytelling
and interpretation to make history and social studies "come alive"
for K-12 students. The professionals who have contributed to this
book understand the challenges of a classroom environment, either
as teachers, guest artists, or administrators. All have real-world
experience with teacher development programs in the disciplines of
history and social studies along with recognized content
knowledge..
Traumagenic events-episodes that have caused or are likely to cause
trauma-color the experiences of K-12 students and the social
studies curriculum they encounter in U.S. schools. At the same time
that the global COVID-19 pandemic has heightened educators'
awareness of collective trauma, the racial reckoning of 2020 has
drawn important attention to historical and transgenerational
trauma. At a time when social studies educators can simply no
longer ignore "difficult" knowledge, instruction that acknowledges
trauma in social studies classrooms is essential. Through employing
relational pedagogies and foregrounding voices that are too often
silenced, the lessons in Hollywood or History? An Inquiry-Based
Strategy for Using Film to Acknowledge Trauma in Social Studies
engage students in examining the role of traumatic or traumagenic
events in social studies curriculum. The 20 Hollywood or History?
lessons are organized by themes such as political trauma and war
and genocide. Each lesson presents film clips, instructional
strategies, and primary and secondary sources targeted to the
identified K-12 grade levels. As a collection, they provide
ready-to-teach resources that are perfect for teachers who are
committed to acknowledging trauma in their social studies
instruction.
This book foregrounds the figure of the perpetrator in a selection
of British, American, and Canadian comics and explores questions
related to remembrance, justice, and historical debt. Its primary
focus is on works that deliberately estrange the figure of the
perpetrator-through fantasy, absurdism, formal ambiguity, or
provocative rewriting-and thus allow readers to engage anew with
the history of genocide, mass murder, and sexual violence. This
book is particularly interested in the ethical space such an
engagement calls into being: in its ability to allow us to ponder
the privilege many of us now enjoy, the gross historical injustices
that have secured it, and the debt we owe to people long dead.
The nineteenth century laid the foundations of history as a
professional discipline but also popularized and romanticized the
subject. National histories were written and state museums founded,
while collective memories were created in fiction and drama, art
and architecture and through the growth of tourism and the
emergence of a heritage industry. The authors of this collection
compare Britain, the Netherlands and Belgium, unearthing the ways
in which history was conceived and then utilized. They conclude
that although nationalistic historicism ruled in all genres, the
interaction of the nineteenth century with its imagined past was
far richer and more complex, both across national borders and
within them. Contributors include: Niek van Sas, Andrew Mycock,
Marnix Beyen, Ellinoor Bergvelt, Joep Leerssen, Joanne Parker, Anna
Vaninskaya, Jenny Graham, Tom Verschaffel, Saartje Vanden Borre,
Hugh Dunthorne and Michael Wintle.
The Idea of History is the best known work of the Oxford
philosopher and historian RG Collingwood. Published posthumously in
1946 it is, in effect, two books: a historiography and a philosophy
of history. Students look to Collingwood for a history of thinking
about history, and to discover his ideas about the nature of
historical understanding. It is an indispensable text for
historians and philosophers yet it is also highly challenging and
many of Collingwood's innovations have been seriously
misunderstood. The primary focus of this book is on Collingwood's
actual arguments, especially the most radical of these, with the
aim of elucidating their construction and appraising them in the
clearest possible way. This guide is the ideal companion to
Collingwood's classic text both for students coming to it for the
first time and for those wishing to consider its arguments afresh.
It offers clear and concise accounts of the book's composition; the
intellectual context of Collingwood's ideas; its central arguments
concerning the nature of history; and its reception and influence.
The Chronicles of England, Scotland and Ireland (1577, 1587),
issued under the name of Raphael Holinshed, was the crowning
achievement of Tudor historiography, and became the principal
source for the historical writings of Spenser, Daniel and, above
all, Shakespeare. While scholars have long been drawn to Holinshed
for its qualities as a source, they typically dismissed it as a
baggy collection of materials, lacking coherent form and analytical
insight. This condescending verdict has only recently given way to
an appreciation of the literary and historical qualities of these
chronicles.
The Handbook is a major interdisciplinary undertaking which gives
the lie to Holinshed's detractors, and provides original
interpretations of a book that has lacked sustained academic
scrutiny. Bringing together leading specialists in a variety of
fields - literature, history, religion, classics, bibliography, and
the history of the book - the Handbook demonstrates that the
Chronicles powerfully reflect the nature of Tudor thinking about
the past, about politics and society, and about the literary and
rhetorical means by which readers might be persuaded of the truth
of narrative. The volume shows how distinctive it was for one book
to chronicle the history of three nations of the British
archipelago.
The various sections of the Handbook analyze the making of the two
editions of the Chronicles; the relationship of the work to
medieval and early modern historiography; its formal properties,
genres and audience; attitudes to politics, religion, and society;
literary appropriations; and the parallel descriptions and
histories of England, Scotland, Ireland, and Wales. The result is a
seminal study that shows unequivocally the vitality and complexity
of the chronicle form in the late sixteenth century.
Historical research in previous decades has done a great deal to
explore the social and political context of early modern natural
and moral inquiries. Particularly since the publication of Steven
Shapin and Simon Schaffer's Leviathan and the Air-Pump (1985)
several studies have attributed epistemological stances and debates
to clashes of political and theological ideologies. The present
volume suggests that with an awareness of this context, it is now
worth turning back to questions of the epistemic content itself.
The contributors to the present collection were invited to explore
how certain non-epistemic values had been turned into epistemic
ones, how they had an effect on epistemic content, and eventually
how they became ideologies of knowledge playing various roles in
inquiry and application throughout early modern Europe.
The Language of the Past analyzes the use of history in discourses
within the political, media and the public sphere. It examines how
particular terms, phrases and allusions first came into usage,
developed and how they are employed today. To speak of something or
someone as representing the 'stone age', or characterize an
institution as 'byzantine', to describe a business relationship as
'feudal' or to disparage ideals or morality as 'Victorian', refers
to both a perception of the past and its relationship to the
present. Whilst dictionaries and etymologies define meanings and
origin points of words or phrases, this study examines how history
is maintained and used within society through language. Detailing
the specific words and phrases associated with particular periods
used to describe contemporary society, this thorough examination of
language and history will be of great interest to those studying
historiography, social history and linguistics.
This work is an engaging exploration of the process of historical
research, following historians as they search for solutions to the
greatest mysteries of all time. Award-winning author Paul Aron
takes readers on a journey through great historical mysteries
through the ages. Entertaining in themselves, the stories also show
that history is not merely living, but lively. The reader who comes
to the book thinking history is boring will leave with a changed
outlook with regard to both the subject matter and the process of
writing history. Each chapter is a carefully and thoroughly
researched presentation not of popularized accounts but of valid
historical scholarship. Chronologically arranged, the essays show
the historical process in action. For each disputed historical
point, theories arise, become standard wisdom, and then are revised
as additional information becomes available. This book reveals the
mechanics of that process, including spirited debate, swashbuckling
archaeology, and the application of modern science to ancient
questions. 75 chronologically arranged chapters, each treating a
famous historical mystery Numerous illustrations and photographs
that bring the subjects to life An annotated list of further
reading for each chapter, arranged chronologically to allow readers
to follow the development of competing theories An engaging,
accessible writing style that brings readers into the twists and
turns of each case
The essays in this volume address central problems in the
development of Roman imperialism in the third and second century
BC. Published in honour of the distinguished Oxford academic Peter
Derow, they follow some of his main interests: the author Polybius,
the characteristics of Roman power and imperial ambition, and the
mechanisms used by Rome in creating and sustaining an empire in the
east. Written by a distinguished group of international historians,
all of whom were taught by Derow, the volume constitutes a new and
distinctive contribution to the history of this centrally important
period, as well as a major advance in the study of Polybius as a
writer. In addition, the volume looks at the way Rome absorbed
religions from the east, and at Hellenistic artistic culture. It
also sheds new light on the important region of Illyria on the
Adriatic Coast, which played a key part in Rome's rise to power.
Archaeological, epigraphic, and textual evidence are brought
together to create a sustained argument for Rome's determined and
systematic pursuit of power.
Prompted by the 'linguistic turn' of the late 20th century,
intellectual and conceptual historians continue to devote a great
deal of attention to the study of concepts in history. This
innovative and interdisciplinary volume builds on such scholarship
by providing a new history of the term 'economy'. Starting from the
Greek idea of the law of the household, Luigi Alonzi traces the
different meanings assumed by the word 'economy' during the middle
ages and early modern era, highlighting the semantic richness of
the word and its uses in various political and cultural contexts.
Notably, there is a particular focus on the so-called Oeconomica
literature, tracking the reception of works by Plato, Aristotle,
the 'pseudo' Aristotle and Xenophon in the Italian and France
Renaissance. This tradition was incredibly influential in civic
humanism and in texts devoted to power and command and thus
affected later debates on Natural Law and the development of new
scientific disciplines in the 17th and 18th centuries. In exploring
this, the analysis of the function of translations in the
transmission and transformation of meanings becomes central.
'Economy' in European History shines much-needed light on an
important challenge that many historians repeatedly face: the fact
that words can, and do, change over time. It will thus be a vital
resource for all scholars of early modern and European economic
history.
The Holocaust is one of the most intensively studied phenomena in
modern history. The volume of writing that fuels the numerous
debates about it is overwhelming in quantity and diversity. Even
those who have dedicated their professional lives to understanding
the Holocaust cannot assimilate it all.
There is, then, an urgent need to synthesize and evaluate the
complex historiography on the Holocaust, exploring the major themes
and debates relating to it and drawing widely on the findings of a
great deal of research. Concentrating on the work of the last two
decades, Histories of the Holocaust examines the "Final Solution"
as a European project, the decision-making process, perpetrator
research, plunder and collaboration, regional studies, ghettos,
camps, race science, antisemitic ideology, and recent debates
concerning modernity, organization theory, colonialism, genocide
studies, and cultural history. Research on victims is discussed,
but Stone focuses more closely on perpetrators, reflecting trends
within the historiography, as well as his own view that in order to
understand Nazi genocide the emphasis must be on the culture of the
perpetrators.
The book is not a "history of the history of the Holocaust,"
offering simply a description of developments in historiography.
Stone critically analyses the literature, discerning major themes
and trends and assessing the achievements and shortcomings of the
various approaches. He demonstrates that there never can or should
be a single history of the Holocaust and facilitates an
understanding of the genocide of the Jews from a multiplicity of
angles. An understanding of how the Holocaust could have happened
can only be achieved by recourse to histories of the Holocaust:
detailed day-by-day accounts of high-level decision-making;
long-term narratives of the Holocaust's relationship to European
histories of colonialism and warfare; micro-historical studies of
Jewish life before, during, and after Nazi occupation; and cultural
analyses of Nazi fantasies and fears.
Readings on the Russian Revolution brings together 15 important
post-Cold War writings on the history of the Russian Revolution. It
is structured in such a way as to highlight key debates in the
field and contrasting methodological approaches to the Revolution
in order to help readers better understand the issues and
interpretative fault lines that exist in this contested area of
history. The book opens with an original introduction which
provides essential background and vital context for the pieces that
follow. The volume is then structured around four parts - 'Actors,
Language, Symbols', 'War, Revolution, and the State',
'Revolutionary Dreams and Identities' and 'Outcomes and Impacts' -
that explore the beginnings, events and outcomes of the Russian
Revolution, as well as examinations of central figures, critical
topics and major historiographical battlegrounds. Melissa Stockdale
also provides translations of two crucial Russian-language works,
published here in English for the first time, and includes useful
pedagogical features such as a glossary, chronology, and thematic
bibliography to further aid study. Readings on the Russian
Revolution is an essential collection for anyone studying the
Russian Revolution.
One of the most celebrated of Plato's ideas was that if human
society was ever to function successfully then philosophers would
need to become kings, or kings philosophers. In a perfect state,
therefore, philosophic wisdom should be wedded to political
power.In antiquity, who were or aspired to be philosopher-kings?
What was their understanding of wisdom and the limits of knowledge?
What influence have they had on periods beyond antiquity? This
volume focuses on Plato and his contemporaries; Alexander the Great
and his Hellenistic successors; Marcus Aurelius and the 'good
emperors'; Moses, Solomon and early Hebrew leaders; and Julian the
Apostate, the last of the pagans. In conclusion it looks at the
re-emergence of the Platonic ideal in important moments of European
history, such as the Enlightenment. The theme of the
philosopher-king is significant for Greco-Roman antiquity as a
whole, and this work is unique in detailing the development of an
idea through major periods of Greek and Roman history, and
beyond.>
During the past two or three decades, the value of the text of the
Hebrew Bible as a testimony to the history of Israel has come under
siege. As the date of the final form of the text has been pushed
later and later, often into the Hellenistic era, the text has been
devalued accordingly: what is "late" is viewed as having less
value. At the same time, the connection between the text and
extratextual information, particularly from archaeology, has been
rendered less and less clear by both archaeological investigation
itself and an increasing inability to connect text and artifact, or
to do so compellingly. Some of the foremost scholars who have
argued that the biblical text contributes little to historical
research have come from Copenhagen. Now, from Copenhagen, Jens
Bruun Kofoed steps forward to address the methodological issues
that must lie behind the use of the biblical text and its
validation as a source for historical information. In this volume,
he sets out the methodological stepping stones necessary to an
honest use of the biblical text and, through discussion of
presuppositions underlying various methodologies and by evaluating
specific test cases, shows (among other things) that "lateness" of
the extant text by itself is not a charge that reduces the text's
value as a source of historical information; that taking modern
genre research and authorial intent into account opens new vistas
for evaluating the historiographical reliability of ancient texts;
and that a way forward from the current impasse is possible."
David Carr outlines a distinctively phenomenological approach to
history. Rather than asking what history is or how we know history,
a phenomenology of history inquires into history as a phenomenon
and into the experience of the historical. How does history present
itself to us, how does it enter our lives, and what are the forms
of experience in which it does so? History is usually associated
with social existence and its past, and so Carr probes the
experience of the social world and of its temporality. Experience
in this context connotes not just observation but also involvement
and interaction: We experience history not just in the social world
around us but also in our own engagement with it. For several
decades, philosophers' reflections on history have been dominated
by two themes: representation and memory. Each is conceived as a
relation to the past: representation can be of the past, and memory
is by its nature of the past. On both of these accounts, history is
separated by a gap from what it seeks to find or wants to know, and
its activity is seen by philosophers as that of bridging this gap.
This constitutes the problem to which the philosophy of history
addresses itself: how does history bridge the gap which separates
it from its object, the past? It is against this background that a
phenomenological approach, based on the concept of experience, can
be proposed as a means of solving this problem-or at least
addressing it in a way that takes us beyond the notion of a gap
between present and past.
This volume considers how the act through which historians
interpret the past can be understood as one of epistemological and
cognitive translation. The book convincingly argues that words,
images, and historical and archaeological remains can all be
considered as objects deserving the same treatment on the part of
historians, whose task consists exactly in translating their past
meanings into present language. It goes on to examine the notion
that this act of translation is also an act of synchronization
which connects past, present, and future, disrupting and resetting
time, as well as creating complex temporalities differing from any
linear chronology. Using a broad, deep interpretation of
translation, History as a Translation of the Past brings together
an international cast of scholars working on different periods to
show how their respective approaches can help us to better
understand and translate the past in the future.
Herbert Marcuse called the preface to Hegel's Phenomenology "one of
the greatest philosophical undertakings of all times." This summary
of Hegel's system of philosophy is now available in English
translation with commentary on facing pages. While remaining
faithful to the author's meaning, Walter Kaufmann has removed many
encumbrances inherent in Hegel's style.
Pliny the Elder's Natural History, from first-century Rome, is the most important surviving encyclopedia of the ancient world. As a guide to the cultural meanings of everyday things in ancient Rome it is unparalleled. Concentrating on Pliny's accounts of foreign lands and peoples, monsters, and barbarians, Trevor Murphy demonstrates the political significance of this reference book as a monument to the power of Roman imperial society.
Settling the Good Land: Governance and Promotion in John Winthrop's
New England (1620-1650) is the first institutional history of the
Massachusetts Bay Company, cornerstone of early modern English
colonisation in North America. Agnes Delahaye analyses settlement
as a form of colonial innovation, to reveal the political
significance of early New England sources, above and beyond
religion. John Winthrop was not just a Puritan, but a settler
governor who wrote the history of the expansion of his company as a
record of successful and enduring policy. Delahaye argues that
settlement, as the action and the experience of appropriating the
land, is key to understanding the role played by Winthrop's
writings in American historiography, before independence and in our
times.
|
|