Buch, Englisch, 362 Seiten, Format (B × H): 161 mm x 240 mm, Gewicht: 708 g
Writing the Past for the Twenty-First Century
Buch, Englisch, 362 Seiten, Format (B × H): 161 mm x 240 mm, Gewicht: 708 g
ISBN: 978-0-19-876878-4
Verlag: Oxford University Press(UK)
What does it mean - and what might it yet come to mean - to write 'history' in the twenty-first century? History After Hobsbawm brings together leading historians from across the globe to ask what being an historian should mean in their particular fields of study. Taking their cue from one of the previous century's greatest historians, Eric Hobsbawm, and his interests across many periods and places, the essays approach their subjects with an underlying sense of what role an historian might seek to play, and attempt to help twenty-first-century society understand 'how we got here'. They present new work in their sub-fields but also point to how their specialisms are developing, how they might further grow in the future, and how different areas of focus might speak to the larger challenges of history - both for the discipline itself and for its relationship to other fields of academic inquiry. Like Hobsbawn, the authors in this collection know that history matters. They speak to both the past and the present and, in so doing, introduce some of the most exciting new lines of research in a broad array of subjects from the medieval period to the present.
Autoren/Hrsg.
Fachgebiete
Weitere Infos & Material
- INTRODUCTION
- 1: John H Arnold, Matthew J Hilton, and Jan Rüger: The Challenges of History
- I. NATION AND EMPIRE
- 2: Catherine Hall: Gendering Property, Racing Capital
- 3: Jan Rüger: Writing Europe into the History of the British Empire
- 4: Renaud Morieux: Indigenous Comparisons
- 5: John Breuilly: Hobsbawm and Researching the History of Nationalism
- 6: Bill Schwarz: Decolonisation as Tragedy
- II. MATERIAL ECONOMIES
- 7: Chris Wickham: Jiangnan style: doing global economic history in the medieval period
- 8: Maxine Berg: Global history and the transformation of early modern Europe
- 9: Pat Hudson: Industry, Working Lives, Nation and Empire, viewed through some key Welsh woollen objects
- 10: Paul Warde: Social and environmental history in the Anthropocene
- 11: Frank Trentmann: Material Histories of the World: Scales and Dynamics
- III. PEOPLE AND POLITICS
- 12: Andy Wood: Five swans over Littleport: fenland folklore and popular memory, c. 1810-1978
- 13: Sonya Rose and Sean Brady: Rethinking Gender and Labour History
- 14: Yasmin Khan: Postcolonial History as War History in the Twentieth Century
- 15: Jon Lawrence: The People's History and the Politics of Everyday Life since 1945
- 16: Alison Light: A Visit to the Dead: Genealogy and the Historian
- CONCLUSION
- 17: Geoff Eley: A 'Slight Angle to the Universe': Eric Hobsbawm, Politics, and History
- Index




