TY - BOOK AU - Tosh,John TI - Historians on history: readings SN - 9781405801683 (pbk.) AV - D 16.8 H673 2009 U1 - 901 23 PY - 2009/// CY - Harlow, England, New York PB - Pearson Longman KW - History KW - Philosophy KW - Historiography N1 - Includes bibliographical references (p. [362]-363) and index; Introduction. Part One: History for its own Sake. Fidelity to the sources. 1. V.H. Galbraith. 2. G.R. Elton. Empathy and imagination. 3. C.V. Wedgwood. 4. Richard Cobb. Part Two: Political Histories. History as progress. 5. J.H. Plumb. 6. E.H. Carr. The nation. 7. Herbert Butterfield. 8. Daniel Boorstin. 9. A. Adu Boahen. Marxism. 10. Christopher Hill. 11. E.J. Hobsbawm. 12. Eugene Genoves. Part Three: The New Radicalism. History from below. 13. Raphael Samuel. 14. Vincent Harding. 15. Alf Ludtke. Gender. 16. Carroll Smith-Rosenberg. 17. Joan Scott. 18. Gisela Bok. Postcolonialism. 19. Ranajit Guha. 20. Dipesh Chakrabarty. 21. Catherine Hall. Part Four: Learning from Historical Perspective. Persistence and change. 22. Marc Bloch. 23. Peter Laslett. Beyond stereotypes. 24. Michael Howard. 25. Howard Zinn. Qualified predictions. 26. H.R. Trevor-Roper. 27. Alan Bullock. Part Five: History as Social Science. New questions, new concepts. 28. Richard Hofstadter. 29. Philip Abrams. The authority of numbers. 30. Emmanuel Le Roy Ladurie. 31. Robert William Fogel. Reactions. 32. Fernand Braudel. 33. Lawrence Stone. 34. Theodore Zeldin. Part Six: The Cultural Turn. The impact of Postmodernism. 35. Patrick Joyce. 36. Joan Scott. 37. Joyce Appleby, Lynn Hunt and Margaret Jacob. The new Cultural History. 38. Mark Poster. 39. Robert Darnton. Memory and culture. 40. Pierre Nora. 41. Katherine Hodgkin and Susannah Radstone. Part Seven: Beyond Academia. 42. H.R. Trevor-Roper. 43. Gerda Lerner. Further Reading. Index UR - http://www.loc.gov/catdir/toc/ecip0819/2008023720.html ER -