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Green offers a remarkably lucid, erudite, and insightful
description and analysis of the theoretical foundations of modern
historical writing. He is the first to provide an orderly
introduction to the several systematic models by which leading
modern historians have attempted to explain continuity and change.
This cogent survey is essential to an understanding of modern
Western historiography.
The book introduces history as a theoretical discipline. Green
examines the many pitfalls of historical writing and demonstrates
that historical truth is a most elusive quarry. He addresses
periodization, the manner in which past time is divided, showing
how prevailing modes of periodization have evolved in the West.
Part two of the book is concerned with the dynamics of change in
European history. Each chapter considers a specific theoretical
orientation, including: the commercial model initiated by Adam
Smith and pursued by Henri Pirenne and others, the demographic
model first formulated by Malthus, the Marxian model (or models),
and the approaches of Weber and Sombart who identified religious
forces as the chief engines of historical change. Part three
addresses models of change being employed in world history,
particularly the world-system approach of Frank and Wallerstein and
the creative orientations of environmental historians. In his
conclusion, Green returns to the question of whether the
theoretical models of change currently in use among historians are
consistent with contemporary modes of periodization. The
bibliography is extensive.
Green offers a remarkably lucid, erudite, and insightful
description and analysis of the theoretical foundations of modern
historical writing. He is the first to provide an orderly
introduction to the several systematic models by which leading
modern historians have attempted to explain continuity and change.
This cogent survey is essential to an understanding of modern
Western historiography. The book introduces history as a
theoretical discipline. Green examines the many pitfalls of
historical writing and demonstrates that historical "truth" is a
most elusive quarry. He addresses periodization, the manner in
which past time is divided, showing how prevailing modes of
periodization have evolved in the West. Part two of the book is
concerned with the dynamics of change in European history. Each
chapter considers a specific theoretical orientation, including:
the commercial model initiated by Adam Smith and pursued by Henri
Pirenne and others, the demographic model first formulated by
Malthus, the Marxian model (or models), and the approaches of Weber
and Sombart who identified religious forces as the chief engines of
historical change. Part three addresses models of change being
employed in world history, particularly the world-system approach
of Frank and Wallerstein and the creative orientations of
environmental historians. In his conclusion, Green returns to the
question of whether the theoretical models of change currently in
use among historians are consistent with contemporary modes of
periodization. The bibliography is extensive.
This is a study of the West Indies in the mid-nineteenth century.
William A. Green draws together the experiences of more than a
dozen different sugar colonies and forms them into a coherent
historical account. The first part of the book examines the West
Indies on the eve of emancipation in 1830; the second explores the
politics and society of the islands during the period 1830-1865, a
key passage in West Indian history. Professor Green presents a
clear general picture of the sugar colonies, and places British
governmental policy towards the region in the context of Victorian
attitudes towards colonial questions. His lucid and comprehensive
account is an important contribution to Caribbean history.
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