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9780582096066

A Global History of Modern Historiography

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  • ISBN13:

    9780582096066

  • ISBN10:

    0582096065

  • Edition: 1st
  • Format: Paperback
  • Copyright: 2008-06-03
  • Publisher: Routledge
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List Price: $63.80

Summary

Has global historical writing and scholarship undergone a process of westernisation over the last two and a half centuries?

Author Biography

Supriya Mukherjee teaches at the University of Memphis.

Table of Contents

Preface and acknowledgementsp. x
Introductionp. 1
Historiographical traditions in the world: a view of the eighteenth centuryp. 19
Where we begin?p. 19
Transcultural comparisonsp. 19
Characteristics of historiographical thought in different culturesp. 20
The Westp. 21
Characteristics of Western historiographyp. 21
The emergence of an Enlightenment worldviewp. 22
Erudition and critical historical scholarshipp. 24
Enlightenment historiographyp. 26
German forms of Enlightenmentp. 27
The emergence of a republic of lettersp. 29
From universal history to Eurocentric ideas of progressp. 29
Concluding observationsp. 32
The Middle Eastp. 32
The rise of Islam and the origin of Muslim historiographyp. 33
Main styles in Muslim historiographyp. 35
The bureaucratization and secularization of historiographyp. 36
The decline of the Muslim world and Muslim historiography?p. 37
Indiap. 38
Western views on Indian historical consciousnessp. 38
Indian forms of historical writingp. 40
Social and intellectual transformations during the early modern periodp. 43
East and South East Asiap. 46
Shamanism and history: the origin of the 'shi'p. 46
The formation of Confucian historiographyp. 47
The History Bureau and dynastic historyp. 49
The spread and influence of dynastic historiographyp. 50
'To seek the truth from facts': the rise of evidential learningp. 52
The advance of nationalism and nationalist history: the West, the Middle East and India in the nineteenth centuryp. 69
Historiography in a revolutionary age between 1789 and 1848p. 69
The political contextp. 69
Romanticism and historiographyp. 70
The impact of emergent nationalism on historiographyp. 71
The relationship between professional scholarship and nationalismp. 73
The liberal reinterpretation of the Middle Agesp. 75
The colonial perspective and historiographyp. 76
The decline of liberalism in historiographyp. 77
Ideas of progress and of crisisp. 79
Hegel's philosophy of historyp. 80
Nationalism and the transformation of Muslim historiographyp. 82
The Muslim 'discovery' of Europep. 82
Whose pharaohs? - (re)writing the history of Egyptp. 87
National identity and historical writingp. 91
Bridging the old and the new: the 'encyclopedists' and the 'neo-chroniclers'p. 95
Nationalism and the transformation of Indian historiographyp. 97
Historiography during early colonialismp. 97
The new pedagogy and the emergence of a modern historical consciousnessp. 100
Religious revivalism and the search for a glorious pastp. 101
The birth of the rationalist paradigmp. 104
The birth of the nationalist paradigmp. 105
Nationalism, communalism and historical writingp. 107
Secular narratives and the emergence of economic nationalismp. 108
Academic history and the nineteenth-century shaping of the historical profession: transforming historical study in the West and in East Asiap. 117
The cult of science and the nation-state paradigm (1848-90)p. 117
The political context of historiographyp. 117
The social context of historiographyp. 119
The turn to 'scientific' historyp. 119
The crisis of Confucian historiography and the establishment of the modern historical profession in East Asiap. 133
Accommodating the Western influencep. 134
Civilization and history: a new worldviewp. 137
The interplay of the old and the newp. 139
George Zerffi, Ludwig Riess and the Rankean influence in Japanp. 141
Japan's 'Orient' and the changing of the Sinitic worldp. 145
Historical writings in the shadow of two world wars: the crisis of historicism and modern historiographyp. 157
The reorientation of historical studies and historical thought (1890-1914)p. 157
The changing political and cultural climatep. 157
The challenge to traditional historiographyp. 158
The existential crisis of modern civilizationp. 171
Historiography between two world wars (1918-39)p. 172
The historians in World War Ip. 172
The critique of rationality and modernity and the defenders of the enlightenmentp. 175
The appeal of nationalist history around the world: historical studies in the Middle East and Asia in the twentieth centuryp. 194
Ottomanism, Turkism and Egyptianization: nationalist history in the Middle Eastp. 194
The rise of modern educationp. 194
Writing Turkish history in/for modern Turkeyp. 197
The Egyptianization of historical writingp. 201
Academic history and national politicsp. 207
Nationalism, scientism, and Marxism: modern historiography in East and South East Asiap. 208
'New historiography' in Chinap. 209
The tension between national history and scientific historyp. 213
Modifying the Rankean model: national history in Japanp. 217
Myth and history: in search of the origin of the Korean nationp. 221
War and revolution: the appeal of Marxist historiographyp. 224
Nationalist historiography in modern Indiap. 227
Late nineteenth-century antecedents: romantic nationalismp. 227
The role of religion in nationalist historiographyp. 230
The nation as history and history as sciencep. 232
The romance of the local and the emergence of alternative narrativesp. 234
The nation re-imagined: the Nehruvian synthesisp. 237
Post-independence historiography: old and new trajectoriesp. 238
Towards a social science historyp. 241
New challenges in the post-war period: from social history to postmodernism and postcolonialismp. 250
The Cold War and the emergence of the new world orderp. 250
Varieties of social history (1945-68/70) in the Westp. 251
The United States: from consensus to the New Leftp. 252
France: the Annalesp. 256
Germany: from Historismus to a critical historical social sciencep. 262
Marxist historiography between orthodoxy and new directionsp. 266
The 1970s and 1980s: the cultural turn and postmodernismp. 270
From social science history to the cultural turnp. 270
Micro-history, the history of everyday life, and historical anthropologyp. 275
Oral history and the history of memoryp. 277
The 'history workshop' movementp. 278
Feminist and gender historyp. 279
Postcolonialismp. 281
The Subaltern Studiesp. 284
Latin America: from Dependencia theory to Subaltern Studiesp. 290
The emergence of modern historiography in-Sub-Saharan Africap. 295
Postmodernism and the linguistic turnp. 301
The rise of Islamism and the ebb of Marxism: historical writings in late twentieth-century Asia and the Middle Eastp. 317
The ebb and flow of Marxist historiography in East and South East Asiap. 317
Reinventing Japan: post-war reform of historical education and writingp. 317
The dominance of Marxist historiography in the People's Republic of Chinap. 320
Challenges to Marxist historiography and Eurocentrismp. 325
Between Marxism and nationalism: academic history in Vietnamp. 327
The resurgence of national historyp. 329
The Annales School, postmodernism and new changes in Japanese historiographyp. 331
China's search for alternatives to Marxist historiographyp. 334
Islamism and Islamic historiography: the Cold War and beyondp. 337
Globalizing Islamic historiographyp. 337
The interplay of history and historiographyp. 339
Edward Said and the critique of Orientalismp. 342
The appeal of Marxism and socialismp. 344
The Islamic revival: Islamism and nationalismp. 348
History and politics: the challenges to nationalist historiographyp. 351
Historiography after the Cold War, 1990-2007: a critical retrospectp. 364
The globalization of the worldp. 364
The reorientation of historical studiesp. 367
The cultural and the linguistic turnp. 368
Feminist and gender historyp. 371
Redefining the alliance between history and the social sciencesp. 375
New challenges to nationalist historyp. 380
World history, global History and history of globalizationp. 387
Glossaryp. 402
Further readingp. 410
Indexp. 425
Table of Contents provided by Ingram. All Rights Reserved.

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