Telling the truth about history / Joyce Appleby, Lynn Hunt, Margaret Jacob.
Material type: TextReference number:ocm28377649Publication details: New York : Norton, 1994. Description: 322 p. ; 22 cmISBN: 0393036154Subject(s): United States -- Historiography | History | United States -- Historiography | History | United StatesDDC classification: 973/.072 LOC classification: E175 | .A67 1994Item type | Current library | Class number | Copy number | Status | Date due | Barcode | Item reservations | |
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Book | Main Library General Shelves | 973.072 AP5T (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | 1 | Available | 052319025 |
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973.05 N42N The new republic. | 973.07 C77O An old-fashioned Senator: Orville H. Platt of Connecticut; | 973.07 N48T Teaching American history. | 973.072 AP5T Telling the truth about history / | 973.072 F49A The American past : | 973.072 R92F Families and communities: a new view of American history | 973.075 SEA Consumers guide, fall 1900. |
Includes bibliographical references (p.) and index.
Pt. 1. Intellectual Absolutisms. 1. The Heroic Model of Science. 2. Scientific History and the Idea of Modernity. 3. History Makes a Nation -- Pt. 2. Absolutisms Dethroned. 4. Competing Histories of America. 5. Discovering the Clay Feet of Science. 6. Postmodernism and the Crisis of Modernity -- Pt. 3. A New Republic of Learning. 7. Truth and Objectivity. 8. The Future of History.
We have lost our grip on historical truth. Popular films depict subterranean conspiracies that shape historical events and public knowledge of those events. Best-selling narrative histories dissolve the border between fact and fiction, allowing the author's imagination to roam freely. Influential critics dissolve the author herself into one among many sources of meaning, reducing historical knowledge to a series of texts engaged with each other, not with the past. Powerful constituencies call for histories that affirm more than inform. This new book by three of our most accomplished historians engages the various criticisms that have fragmented the authority of historical knowledge. Although acknowledging degrees of legitimacy in the criticisms, the authors launch a pragmatic response that supports the historian, as they put it, in her long climb, notebook computer in tow, up the 300 stairs to the archives in Lyon. Even if historical truth is an ever-receding goal, the effort to approach it, they show, is legitimate, worthy, and governed by agreed-upon rules. And while affirming the claims of women and ethnic minorities to a rightful place in any narrative of American history, the authors insist on the accountability of history. They outline a coherent narrative of the American past that incorporates its multicultural dimension without special pleading.
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