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E. H. Carr wrote, "study the historian before you begin to study
the facts." This book approaches the life, work, ideas, debates,
and the context of key 20th- and 21st-century historians through an
analysis of their life writing projects viewed as historiographical
sources. Merging literary studies on autobiography with theories of
history, it provides a systematic and detailed analysis of the
autobiographies of the most outstanding historians, from the
classic texts by Giambattista Vico, Edward Gibbon and Henry Adams,
to the Annales historians such as Fernand Braudel, Philippe Aries
and Georges Duby, to Marxist historians such as Eric Hobsbawm and
Annie Kriegel, to postmodern historians such as Carolyn Steedman,
Robert A. Rosenstone, Carlos Eire, Luisa Passerini, Elisabeth
Roudinesco, Gerda Lerner and Sheila Fitzpatrick, and to
"interventional" historians such as Geoff Eley, Jill Ker Conway,
Natalie Davis and Gabrielle Spiegel. Using a comparative approach
to these texts, this book identifies six
historical-autobiographical styles: humanistic, biographic,
ego-historical, monographic, postmodern, and interventional. By
privileging historians' autobiographies, this book proposes a
renewed history of historiography, one that engages the theoretical
evolution of the discipline, the way history has been interpreted
by historians, and the currents of thought and ideologies that have
dominated and influenced its writing in the 20th and 21st
centuries.
This book deals with the way historical genres are theorized and
practiced in the twenty-first century. In the context of the
freedoms inspired by postmodernism and enabled by the development
of innovative textual and graphic platforms, new theories of
history view genres as flexible living forms that inspire more
creative and experimental representations of the past. New ways of
articulating history compete with the traditional model of
historical prose. Acknowledging the current diversity in theories
and practices, and assuming the historicity of historical genres,
this book engages the reality of historical genres today and
explores new directions in historical practice by examining these
new forms of representing the past. Thus, without denying the
validity of traditional and conventional forms of history (and
arguing that these forms remain valid), this book surveys the
production of what might be considered new historical genres
practiced today, in which the idea of "practical past" is put in
practice. Preceded by the introduction and two theoretical articles
on historical genres, some of the new forms of history analysed in
this book are: historical re-enactments, gaming history, social
media, graphic narratives and first-person narratives of, memoirs
of trauma, and film-history. This book was originally published as
a special issue of Rethinking History.
Based on narrative, iconographical, and liturgical sources, this is
the first systematic study to trace the story of the ritual of
royal self-coronations from Ancient Persia to the present. Exposing
as myth the idea that Napoleon's act of self-coronation in 1804 was
the first extraordinary event to break the secular tradition of
kings being crowned by bishops, Jaume Aurell vividly demonstrates
that self-coronations were not as transgressive or unconventional
as has been imagined. Drawing on numerous examples of royal
self-coronations, with a particular focus on European Kings of the
Middle Ages, including Frederic II of Germany (1229), Alphonse XI
of Castile (1328), Peter IV of Aragon (1332) and Charles III of
Navarra (1390), Aurell draws on history, anthropology, ritual
studies, liturgy and art history to explore royal self-coronations
as privileged sites at which the frontiers and limits between the
temporal and spiritual, politics and religion, tradition and
innovation are encountered.
E. H. Carr wrote, "study the historian before you begin to study
the facts." This book approaches the life, work, ideas, debates,
and the context of key 20th- and 21st-century historians through an
analysis of their life writing projects viewed as historiographical
sources. Merging literary studies on autobiography with theories of
history, it provides a systematic and detailed analysis of the
autobiographies of the most outstanding historians, from the
classic texts by Giambattista Vico, Edward Gibbon and Henry Adams,
to the Annales historians such as Fernand Braudel, Philippe Aries
and Georges Duby, to Marxist historians such as Eric Hobsbawm and
Annie Kriegel, to postmodern historians such as Carolyn Steedman,
Robert A. Rosenstone, Carlos Eire, Luisa Passerini, Elisabeth
Roudinesco, Gerda Lerner and Sheila Fitzpatrick, and to
"interventional" historians such as Geoff Eley, Jill Ker Conway,
Natalie Davis and Gabrielle Spiegel. Using a comparative approach
to these texts, this book identifies six
historical-autobiographical styles: humanistic, biographic,
ego-historical, monographic, postmodern, and interventional. By
privileging historians' autobiographies, this book proposes a
renewed history of historiography, one that engages the theoretical
evolution of the discipline, the way history has been interpreted
by historians, and the currents of thought and ideologies that have
dominated and influenced its writing in the 20th and 21st
centuries.
Essays on the post-modern reception and interpretation of the
middle ages. This volume not only defines medievalism's margins, as
well as its role in marginalizing other fields, ideas, people,
places, and events, but also provides tools and models for
exploring those issues and indicates new subjects towhich they
might apply. The eight opening essays address the physical
marginalizing of medievalism in annotated texts on medieval
studies; the marginalism of oneself via medievalism; medievalism's
dearth of ecotheory and religious studies; academia's paucity of
pop medievalism; and the marginalization of races, ethnicities,
genders, sexual orientations, and literary characters in
contemporary medievalism. The seven subsequent articles build on
this foundation while discussing: the distancing of oneself (and
others) during imaginary visits to the Middle Ages; lessons from
the margins of Brazilian medievalism; mutual marginalization among
factions of Spanish medieval studies; and medievalism in the
marginalization of lower socio-economic classes in late-eighteenth-
and early nineteenth-century Spain, of modern gamers, of
contemporary laborers, and of Alfred Austin, a late-nineteenth- and
early twentieth-century poet also known as Alfred the Little. In
thus investigating the margins of and marginalization via
medievalism, the volume affirms their centrality to the field. Karl
Fugelso is Professor of Art History at Towson University in
Baltimore, Maryland. Contributors: Nadia R. Altschul, Megan Arnott,
Jaume Aurell, Juan Gomis Coloma, Elizabeth Emery, Vincent Ferre,
Valerie B. Johnson, Alexander L. Kaufman, Erin Felicia Labbie,
VickieLarsen, Kevin Moberly, Brent Moberly, Alicia C. Montoya,
Serina Patterson, Jeff Rider, Lindsey Simon-Jones, Richard Utz,
Helen Young.
This book deals with the way historical genres are theorized and
practiced in the twenty-first century. In the context of the
freedoms inspired by postmodernism and enabled by the development
of innovative textual and graphic platforms, new theories of
history view genres as flexible living forms that inspire more
creative and experimental representations of the past. New ways of
articulating history compete with the traditional model of
historical prose. Acknowledging the current diversity in theories
and practices, and assuming the historicity of historical genres,
this book engages the reality of historical genres today and
explores new directions in historical practice by examining these
new forms of representing the past. Thus, without denying the
validity of traditional and conventional forms of history (and
arguing that these forms remain valid), this book surveys the
production of what might be considered new historical genres
practiced today, in which the idea of "practical past" is put in
practice. Preceded by the introduction and two theoretical articles
on historical genres, some of the new forms of history analysed in
this book are: historical re-enactments, gaming history, social
media, graphic narratives and first-person narratives of, memoirs
of trauma, and film-history. This book was originally published as
a special issue of Rethinking History.
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