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9780804743051

The Practice of Conceptual History

by
  • ISBN13:

    9780804743051

  • ISBN10:

    0804743053

  • Format: Paperback
  • Copyright: 2002-07-01
  • Publisher: Stanford Univ Pr

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Summary

Reinhart Koselleck is one of the most important theorists of history and historiography of the last half century. His work has implications for contemporary cultural studies that extend far beyond discussions of the practical problems of historical method. He is the foremost exponent and practitioner of Begriffsgeschichte, a methodology of historical studies that focuses on the invention and development of the fundamental concepts underlying and informing a distinctively historical manner of being in the world. The eighteen essays in this volume illustrate the four theses of Koselleck's concept of history. First, historical process is marked by a distinctive kind of temporality different from that found in nature. This temporality is multileveled and subject to different rates of acceleration and deceleration, and functions not only as a matrix within which historical events happen but also as a causal force in the determination of social reality in its own right. Second, historical reality is social reality, an internally differentiated structure of functional relationships in which the rights and interests of one group collide with those of other groups, and lead to the kinds of conflict in which defeat is experienced as an ethical failure requiring reflection on "what went wrong" to determine the historical significance of the conflict itself. Third, the history of historiography is a history of the evolution of the language of historians. In this respect, Koselleck's work converges with that of Barthes, Foucault, and Derrida, all of whom stress the status of historiography as discourse rather than as discipline, and feature the constitutive nature of historical discourse as against its claim to literal truthfulness. Finally, the fourth aspect of Koselleck's notion of the concept of history is that a properly historicist concept of history is informed by the realization that what we call modernity is nothing more than an aspect of the discovery of history's concept in our age. The aporias of modernismin arts and letters as well as in the human and natural sciencesare a function of the discovery of the historicity of both society and knowledge.

Author Biography

Reinhart Koselleck is Professor of History at the University of Bielefeld.

Table of Contents

Foreword ix
Hayden White
On the Need for Theory in the Discipline of History
1(19)
Social History and Conceptual History
20(18)
Introduction to Hayden White's Tropics of Discourse
38(7)
Transformations of Experience and Methodological Change: A Historical-Anthropological Essay
45(39)
The Temporalization of Utopia
84(16)
Time and History
100(15)
Concepts of Historical Time and Social History
115(16)
The Unknown Future and the Art of Prognosis
131(17)
Remarks on the Revolutionary Calendar and Neue Zeit
148(6)
The Eighteenth Century as the Beginning of Modernity
154(16)
On the Anthropological and Semantic Structure of Bildung
170(38)
Three burgerliche Worlds? Preliminary Theoretical-Historical Remarks on the Comparative Semantics of Civil Society in Germany, England, and France
208(10)
``Progress'' and ``Decline'': An Appendix to the History of Two Concepts
218(18)
Some Questions Regarding the Conceptual History of ``Crisis''
236(12)
The Limits of Emancipation: A Conceptual-Historical Sketch
248(17)
Daumier and Death
265(20)
War Memorials: Identity Formations of the Survivors
285(42)
Afterword to Charlotte Beradt's The Third Reich of Dreams
327(14)
Notes 341

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