The New History
by Alun Munslow 2020-07-24 13:28:10
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The notion of AhistoryA has always been one strenuously debated by both academics and the wider population. This deeply provocative re-thinking of our engagement with the past by one of the worldAs leading post-modern historians takes that debate one... Read more

The notion of AhistoryA has always been one strenuously debated by both academics and the wider population. This deeply provocative re-thinking of our engagement with the past by one of the worldAs leading post-modern historians takes that debate one step further.

Alun Munslow re-assesses history in the light of post-modernism and other intellectual challenges which have questioned the primacy of the modernist epistemology of empiricism. In an original and stimulating vision of history that will intrigue all those seriously interested in the subject, Munslow argues that history is not only about the sources, but a literary construction.

Munslow concludes that history, as a cultural narrative about the past can never tell us what the past really means. This far reaching conclusion is based on the radical idea that the content of history is defined as much by the nature of the language used to represent and interpret that content as it is by research into the sources. This suggests that history does not produce the most likely meaning of the past but rather can only generate alternative meanings.

The lead volume in a major new series on historical thinking and practice, this is an accessible yet absorbing study that breaks new ground in discussing the stage history is at now, and perhaps most engagingly, the direction it will take in the future.

Alun Munslow is Professor of History and Historical Theory at the University of Staffordshire. He is the author of "Deconstructing History," "The Routledge Companion to Historical Studies" and is the UK Editor of "Rethinking History: The Journal of Theory and Practice.""" Less

  • File size
  • Print pages
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  • Publication date
  • ISBN
  • 9.18x6.36x0.59inches
  • 244
  • Routledge
  • November 1, 2003
  • 9780582472822
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