Theory, method, and practice in social and cultural history

書誌事項

Theory, method, and practice in social and cultural history

edited by Peter Karsten and John Modell

(Problems in method and theory of social history)

New York University Press, c1992

  • : hard
  • : pbk

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注記

Includes bibliographical references and index

内容説明・目次

巻冊次

: hard ISBN 9780814746271

内容説明

Two decades ago historical practice in the United States and Europe was challenged by social historians with "behaviourist" approaches. The approaches of these social historians diverged dramatically from the discipline's traditional preferences for textual evidence, to accounts that explained occurrences in terms of individual intention, and to narrative presentation of results. The new trends in the practice of social history emphasized instead quite different approaches including routinely generated accounts of individual behaviour treated quantitatively, explanations made in terms of functional or economically rational behaviour, and presentations that incorporated the social-science formalization of hypothesis and test. These behaviourist trends, however, by no means swept the field of social history. Today's historical practices, in fact, widely call for actor-centred accounts that are not mentalistic but take into consideration biology and the unconscious; that do not focus upon individuals to the exclusion of groups, markets, cultures, and other socially defined fields of action, and that do so with due regard to the fact of and the limitations upon power in human societies. This is a tall order. If historical practices today, then, are in flux, so are the method and discourse employed in that practice. Militantly eclectic historians do not characteristically extract questions of method and discourse from practice. Far more often, they embed their reflections upon how to do historical work in the work itself. Because history as a discipline is classified in the United States as a discipline in the "humanities", and because accounts of historical phenomena are often offered in as seamless a fashion as possible, uncluttered with discussions extraneous to the flow of exposition and interpretation, explicit reflections upon "how to" are commonly left omitted from historical writing.

目次

  • "Contributors' Introduction", Peter Karsten and John Modell
  • "Context, Time, History", Daniel Scott Smith
  • "On the Meaning and Analysis of Change in History", Samuel P. Hays
  • "History and the Pursuit of Interdisciplinary Research in the Human Sciences", Katherine A. Lynch
  • "Interdisciplinary Approaches to Historical Analysis - the Uneasy Waltz of Economics and History", John Komlos
  • "On Systems and Embodiments as Categories for Intellectual and Social History", David Lindenfeld
  • "The Intellectual Field, Intellectual History, and the Sociology of Knowledge", Fritz K. Ringer
  • "Undoing Culture", Harold Mah
  • "Social History is Always Intellectual History or Intellectual History is Always Social History or Finally, There is Only History", Richard L. Schoenwald
  • "Explanation in History - In Defense of Operationalism", Winifred B. Rothenberg
  • "Confessions of an Archive Junkie", Mary Lindemann
  • "The Face on the Cutting Room Floor - The Place of Practice in Changing Approaches to Historical Analysis", Michael H. Frisch
  • "Exchanging Names in Neckerhausen Around 1700", David Warren Sabean.
巻冊次

: pbk ISBN 9780814746417

内容説明

Two decades ago, historical practice in the United States and Europe was challenged by social historians with "behaviourist" approaches which diverged from the discipline's traditional preferences for textual evidence. Such accounts explained occurences in terms of individual intention and a narrative presentation of results. But such behaviourist trends by no means swept the field of social history, and current historical practices go in yet another direction. Today what is widely called for involves actor-centred accounts that do not focus upon individuals to the exclusion of groups, markets, cultures and other socially-defined fields of action, and that consider power in human societies as well as the limitations upon that power. Recognising that historical practices as well as method and discourse are in flux, this book is the result of the second biennial conference of the Pittsburgh Center for Social History, in which a number of scholars in the field reflect on the prevailing situation in historical writing and research.

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