Preface x
1 The Ever-Changing Shape and Texture of the Past 1
Static and Dynamic Concepts of History 1
Revising Our View of the Past 3
New Forms of Historical Consciousness 4
Toward a "People's History" 6
Minorities and Women Enter History 7
The Annales School and Cliometrics 9
Psychology and History 12
Microhistory and Macrohistory 13
Postmodernism 14
A Multitude of Avenues to the Past 15
2 The Nature and Variety of Historical Sources 17
Primary Sources 17
Manuscript Sources 18
Published Sources 18
Secondary Works 21
Books 22
Essays 24
Articles 24
Dissertations and Conference Papers 26
3 Finding Your Sources: The Online Library Catalog and Beyond 30
The Online Library Catalog 31
Subject Headings, Keywords, and Title Words 32
Creating and Using a Research Bibliography 36
Published Bibliographies 38
Printed and Electronic Indexes and Abstracts 40
Finding Scholarly Essays 45
Other Important Databases 46
Historical Research on the Internet 47
Finding Useful Reference Materials 48
4 Getting the Most Out of History Books: Critical Reading and Assessment 51
The Need for More Effective Reading 51
Finding Out about Authors 53
Comparing Similar Works of History 55
Reviewing a History Book 62
5 Beyond Textual Sources: Historians’Use of Other Media 64
Words, Images, and the Historical Imagination 64
The Birth of a Nation: Entertainment, Propaganda, and Critical Response 65
Reading, Viewing, Reflecting: A Case Study 72
The Evolving Integration of Text and Image 75
6 History's Public(s) and Public History 77
Reaching Out to a Mass Public by Early Electronic Media 78
History and Journalism 80
Beyond the Classroom and the Study: Public History 82
Contested History in the Public Arena 86
7 Exploring Changing Interpretations: The Historiographic Essay 89
Selecting and Refining a Topic 89
Research for a Historiographic Essay: A Case Study 91
Writing the Historiographic Essay 94
Alternative Approaches 108
8 Engaging with Primary Sources: The Research Paper 110
Searching for a Viable Topic 111
Finding Primary Sources 112
Approaching Your Reading 113
Notetaking 114
The Outline and Structure of Your Paper 118
Some Elements of Effective Writing 119
An Open Mind and Intellectual Honesty 122
Quoting 123
Footnoting 125
Editing and Revising 127
One Final Look 129
9 Conclusion: The Open-Ended Nature of History 130
Appendix A: Published Bibliographies 133
Appendix B: Major Databases for Bibliographic Searching 135
Appendix C: Footnote/Endnote Formatting 136
Books 136
Book by a Single Author 136
Book by Two Authors 137
Book by Three Authors 137
Book by Four or More Authors 137
Book with Author(s) as Editor(s) 137
Articles and Essays (Chapters) 137
Journal Article 138
Magazine Article 138
Newspaper Article 138
Encyclopedia Article 138
Essay (Chapter) 138
Book Review 139
Other Types of Sources 139
Dissertation 139
Government Document 139
Website 139
Videorecording 139
Footnote Reference to a Previously Cited Work 139
Appendix D: Bibliography Formatting 141
Book 141
Article 141
Essay (Chapter) 141
Dissertation 141
Sample Bibliography 142
Appendix E: Commonly Used Abbreviations 144
Suggestions for Further Reading 146
Index 148
Anthony Brundage is Professor of History Emeritus at California State Polytechnic University, Pomona, USA. Among his publications are seven books, the most recent of which, co-authored with Richard Cosgrove is British Historians and National Identity: From Hume to Churchill.
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