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Description

This innovative work offers the first comprehensive transcultural history of historiography. The contributors transcend a Eurocentric approach not only in terms of the individual historiographies they assess, but also in the methodologies they use for comparative analysis. Moving beyond the traditional national focus of historiography, the book offers a genuinely comparative consideration of the commonalities and differences in writing history. Distinguishing among distinct cultural identities, the contributors consider the ways and means of intellectual transfers and assess the strength of local historiographical traditions as they are challenged from outside. The essays explore the question of the utility and the limits of conceptions of modernism that apply Western theories of development to non-Western cultures. Warning against the dominant tendency in recent historiographies of non-Western societies to define these predominantly in relation to Western thought, the authors show the extent to which indigenous traditions have been overlooked. The key question is how the triad of industrialization, modernization, and the historicization process, which was decisive in the development of modern academic historiography, also is valid beyond Europe. Illustrating just how deeply suffused history writing is with European models, the book offers a broad theoretical platform for exploring the value and necessity of a world historiography beyond Eurocentrism.

Table of Contents

Chapter 1 Introduction: Provincializing Europe: Historiography as a Transcultural Concept
Part 2 Historiography and Cultural Identity
Chapter 3 The Authenticy of a Copy: Problems of Nineteenth-Century Spanish-American Historiography
Chapter 4 In Search of Lost Identity: South Africa Between Great Trek and Colonial Nationalism, 1830-1910
Chapter 5 India's Connection to History: The Discipline and the Relation between Center and Periphery
Chapter 6 Historiography on a "Continent without History": Anglophone West Africa, 1880s-1940s
Chapter 7 Alternative National Histories in Japan: Yamaji Aizan and Academic Historiography
Part 8 Across Cultural Borders
Chapter 9 German Historicism and Scientific History in China, 1900-1940
Chapter 10 Transfer and Interaction: France and Francophone African Historiography
Chapter 11 The Historical Discipline in the United States: Following the German Model?
Chapter 12 The Politics of the Republic of Learning: International Scientific Congresses in Europe, the Pacific Rim, and Latin America
Part 13 Beyond Eurocentrism: The Politics of History in a Global Age
Chapter 14 History without a Center? Reflections on Eurocentrism
Chapter 15 Africa and the Construction of a Grand Narrative in World History
Chapter 16 "Modernity" and "Asia" in the Study of Chinese History
Chapter 17 Comparing Cultures in Intercultural Communication

Product details

Published Dec 22 2001
Format Paperback
Edition 1st
Extent 432
ISBN 9780742517684
Imprint Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
Dimensions 9 x 6 inches
Publisher Bloomsbury Publishing

About the contributors

Anthology Editor

Eckhardt Fuchs

Anthology Editor

Benedikt Stuchtey

Contributor

Arif Dirlik

Contributor

Andreas Eckert

Contributor

Michael Gottlob

Contributor

Wang Hui

Contributor

Maghan Keita

Contributor

Jochen Meissner

Contributor

Jörn Rüsen

Contributor

Stefan Tanaka

Contributor

Q Edward Wang

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