List of tables. Preface. Acknowledgments. 1.What is historical theory? 2. What is the past? 3. Relations with the past 4. The material relation: rooted in the past 5. The aesthetic relation: historical narratives 6. The political relation: making history .7 The epistemic relation (i): historical hypotheses 8. The epistemic relation (ii): historical explanations 9. The epistemic relation (iii): truth and plausibility. 10 The moral relation: lessons from the past 11. Relations management: the ethics of historical scholarship Index.
Herman Paul is Associate Professor of Historical Theory and Historiography at Leiden University, where he directs a research project on ‘The Scholarly Self: Character, Habit, and Virtue in the Humanities, 1860-1930’. His publications include Hayden White: The Historical Imagination (Polity Press, 2011).
"This is currently the best introduction to historical theory
available in English – comprehensive, lucid and dealing in original
and innovative ways with a range of key problems in the philosophy
of history and historical theory. It should be read by any
undergraduate studying history and will be read with great benefit
by many Masters and PhD students as well as professional historians
interested in historical theory. The way Herman Paul combines the
problematisation of what the past is with explorations into the
political, aesthetic, epistemic, and moral dimensions of historical
writing is utterly convincing."Stefan Berger, Ruhr University
Bochum, Germany "Key Issues in Historical Theory is one of the most
absorbing and accessible history theory books that I have read
recently. Paul has written a thoughtful and intelligent work about
how we think about, write and read history. One of the strengths of
the work, apart from its readability, is the use he makes of
interesting examples to illustrate his theoretical argument, thus
clearly demonstrating the relevance of theoretical reflection for
historians."Claire Norton, St Mary's University, Twickenham, United
Kingdom
"This is currently the best introduction to historical theory
available in English – comprehensive, lucid and dealing in original
and innovative ways with a range of key problems in the philosophy
of history and historical theory. It should be read by any
undergraduate studying history and will be read with great benefit
by many Masters and PhD students as well as professional historians
interested in historical theory. The way Herman Paul combines the
problematisation of what the past is with explorations into the
political, aesthetic, epistemic, and moral dimensions of historical
writing is utterly convincing."Stefan Berger, Ruhr University
Bochum, Germany "Key Issues in Historical Theory is one of the most
absorbing and accessible history theory books that I have read
recently. Paul has written a thoughtful and intelligent work about
how we think about, write and read history. One of the strengths of
the work, apart from its readability, is the use he makes of
interesting examples to illustrate his theoretical argument, thus
clearly demonstrating the relevance of theoretical reflection for
historians."Claire Norton, St Mary's University, Twickenham, United
Kingdom"Describing his book as 'an attractive, accessible and
up-to-date guide to the field of historical theory,' Paul offers
much more than an analysis of major historiographical works and
ideas. His book, translated from the Dutch and introducing the
ideas and processes of doing history, also introduces practical
insights and the use of theories by and for historians,
non-historians, and academics in general...Summing Up: Highly
recommended. All levels/libraries."K. Lynass, University of
Maryland University College, CHOICE Review
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