Description

Contributors to this volume offer insights from the discipline of history about the nature of empathy and the necessity of examining perspectives on the past. On the basis of recent classroom research, they suggest tested guides to more robust teaching. The contributors insist that with experienced history and social studies teachers, students can learn many historical details and, with the use of empathy, develop deepened and textured interpretations of the history that they study.

Table of Contents

Chapter 1 Introduction : In Pursuit of Historical Empathy
Chapter 2 The Role of Empathy in the Development of Historical Understanding
Chapter 3 Empathy, Perspective Taking, and Rational Understanding
Chapter 4 From Empathic Regard to Self-Understanding: Im/Positionality, Empathy, and Historic Contextualization
Chapter 5 Crossing the Empty Spaces: Perspective-Taking in New Zealand Adolescents' Understanding of National History
Chapter 6 Teaching and Learning Multiple Perspectives on the Use of the Atomic Bomb: Historical Empathy in the Secondary Classroom
Chapter 7 Perspectives and Elementary Social Studies: Practice and Promise
Chapter 8 The Holocaust and Historical Empathy: The Politics of Understanding
Chapter 9 Historical Empathy in Theory and Practice: Some Final Thoughts

Product details

Published May 25 2001
Format Paperback
Edition 1st
Extent 208
ISBN 9780847698134
Imprint Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
Dimensions 229 x 147 mm
Publisher Bloomsbury Publishing

About the contributors

Anthology Editor

O. L. Davis Jr.

Anthology Editor

Elizabeth Anne Yeager

Anthology Editor

Stuart J. Foster

Contributor

Rosalyn Ashby

Contributor

O L. Davis Jr.

Contributor

Frans Doppen

Contributor

Sherry L. Field

Contributor

Peter Lee

Contributor

Karen L. Riley

Related Titles

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