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Description
Q. Edward Wang's unparalleled four-volume survey of historiography examines the nature and significance of history writing from ancient worlds to the present day. Taking a global approach, it presents and contextualizes classic works that portray the traditions of historical writing around the world. The collection also incorporates key essays and articles from the 18th century to the present that analyze the continuities and transformations that have existed and taken place within those traditions.
Edited by a world-renowned, leading scholar in the field, the four volumes cover the ancient and medieval eras, the Renaissance period through to the 18th century, the rise of the Rankean school and 'scientific history' in the West, and new developments in worldwide historiography from the 1990s to the present day. As well as substantial contextualizing editor introductions for each volume, there are 60 individual essays and extracts included across the set, with notions of time, antiquarianism, the Annales School and postcolonialism all key topics at the heart of this vital collection.
This is an essential resource for all scholars interested in historiography and the development of history as a discipline.
Table of Contents
General Introduction
Introduction
Part I: Theme
Part II: Style/Format
Part III: Notions of Time
Part IV: Function
Volume 2: Transition and Transformation
General Introduction
Introduction
Part I: Renaissance/Revivalism
Part II: Antiquarianism
Part III: Philology
Part IV: Pyrrhonism
Part V: Universal History
Volume 3: Scientific Models: From the West to the World
General Introduction
Introduction
Part I: Ranke and Rankean School
Part II: Crisis of Historicism
Part III: Marxism
Part IV: Annales School
Part V: Nationalism
Part VI: Social History: Old and New
Part VII: Women's and Gender History
Volume 4: Challenges and Criticisms: From the 1990s to the Present
General Introduction
Introduction
Part I: Postmodernism
Part II: Postcolonialism
Part III: World/Global History
Part IV: Environmental History
Part V: History of Emotions
Part VI: Postnarrativism
Further Readings
Product details

Published | Feb 25 2021 |
---|---|
Format | Hardback - Pack |
Edition | 1st |
ISBN | 9781350086876 |
Imprint | Bloomsbury Academic |
Dimensions | 244 x 169 mm |
Series | Critical and Primary Sources |
Publisher | Bloomsbury Publishing |
About the contributors
Reviews
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Over the past quarter century, the study of historiography has been globalized and expanded well beyond older accounts that focused principally on European-based traditions of historical writing. Often simply considered as the analysis of writings about particular problems or events and taken as an add-on or adjunct to “real” history, it has become a serious historical subfield in its own right-in a sense, the discipline's theoretical and historical meta-field. As a result, there are now several recent textbooks, encyclopedias, monographs, and book series available to students, professional historians, and others interested in the subject. Yet some of the most incisive and thought-provoking historiographical studies of the past four decades have appeared not in book form but in a range of academic journals from around the world-not all of which are always readily accessible outside major research libraries. Q. Edward Wang has used his extensive experience of teaching, critically thinking about, and prolifically writing on historiography to select some of the best historiographical scholarship to be produced since the 1980s for reprinting. They appear here with the added benefit of Prof. Wang's substantive introductions to each of four chronologically-arranged volumes that cover writings on subjects ranging from antiquity to the present, and with an ambitiously global geographic range. With this handsome set, Bloomsbury continues to establish itself as a major publisher of scholarship focusing on the history, nature, and changing social role of human study of the past.
Daniel Woolf, Professor of History, Queens University, Canada