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STUDYING HISTORY

How to Study Series editors: John Peck and Martin Coyle IN THE SAME SERIES How to Begin Studying English Literature (second edition) Nicholas Marsh How to Study a Jane Austen Novel (second edition) Vivien Jones How to Study Chaucer Robert Pope How to Study ajoseph Conrad Novel Brian Spittles How to Study a Charles Dickens Novel Keith Selby How to Study an E. M. Forster Novel Nigel Messenger How to Study a Thomas Hardy Novel John Peck How to Study a D. H. Lawrence Novel Nigel Messenger How to Study James Joyce John Blades How to Study Linguistics Geqffrry Finch How to Study Milton David Keams How to Study Modern Drama Kenneth Pickering How to Study Modern Poetry Tony Curtis How to Study a Novel (second edition) John Peck How to Study a Poet (second edition) John Peck How to Study a Renaissance Play Chris Coles How to Study Romantic Poetry Paul O'Flinn How to Study a Shakespeare Play (second edition) John Peck and Martin Coyle How to Study Television Keith Selby and Ron Cowdery Literary Terms and Criticism (second edition) John Peck and Martin Coyle Practical Criticism John Peck and Martin Coyle Studying History Jeremy Black and Donald M. MacRaild

Studying History Jeremy Black and Donald M. MacRaild MACMIllAN

leremy Black and Donald M. MacRaild 1997 All rights reserved. No reproduction, copy or transmission of this publication may be made without written permission. No paragraph of this publication may be reproduced, copied or transmitted save with written permission or in accordance with the provisions of the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988, or under the terms of any licence permitting limited copying issued by the Copyright Licensing Agency, 90 Tottenham Court Road, London WIP 9HE. Any person who does any unauthorised act in relation to this publication may be liable to criminal prosecution and civil claims for damages. The authors have asserted their rights to be identified as the authors of this work in accordance with the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988. First published 1997 by MACMILLAN PRESS LTD Houndmills, Basingstoke, Hampshire RG21 6XS and London Companies and representatives throughout the world ISBN 978-0-333-68795-6 ISBN 978-1-349-14396-2 (ebook) DOI 10.1007/978-1-349-14396-2 A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library. This book is printed on paper suitable for recycling and made from fully managed and sustained forest sources. 10 9 06 05 8 7 6 5 04 03 02 01 4 3 00 99 2 98 I 97

To Bill Purdue

Contents Editors' priface Prqace xi Xlll PART I 1 The scope of history Introduction The uses of history History and the national myth Competing histories History and ideology Ideology and the historians Ideology and sources History and time The relativity of time and change History as 'problems' The problem of description and analysis The problem of controversy and debate Conclusions 2 Varieties of history (i): 'traditional history' Introduction Early history Beyond Europe The Enlightenment and history The eighteenth-century British tradition 3 3 5 7 9 10 12 13 14 16 18 19 20 22 24 24 26 28 29 32 VII

V1ll CONTENTS The Whig tradition 33 The French Revolution 33 'History for below' 35 Connecting the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries 37 The age of Ranke 39 Non-European empirical traditions 41 Positivism 42 The Victorian tradition: Macaulay to Acton 42 Continental innovations 45 The New World 47 The industrial world 49 Conclusions 49 3 Varieties of history (ii): 'the New History' 51 Introduction 51 The historical antecedents of social and economic history 53 Social history: Green and Trevelyan 54 A tide of reaction? The emergence of modern social and economic history 56 The influence of the Industrial Revolution 57 J. H. Clapham 59 Lewis Namier and R. H. Tawney 61 Russia and the USSR 63 A continental revolution? The early Annates School in France 65 Developments after the Second World War 69 Communist perspectives 70 India 72 France and the post-war Annates School 72 The 1960s: 'real' new directions in history? 74 Later Annates and 'New Economic History' 76 Cultural history 77 A diffusion of ideas? History to the present day 78 Conclusions 81 PART II 4 Approaches to history: sources, Dlethods and historians 85 Introduction 85

CONTENTS ix Historians and sources 87 Local history 90 Traditional history 93 Comparative history 102 'History from below' 107 Cultural history, or the history of mentalities III Quantitative history 116 Conclusions 121 5 Theories and concepts 123 Introduction 123 History and sociology 124 The historical process 128 Marxism 129 Class, structure and agency 134 Gender 139 Community and identity 142 Ethnicity 146 Ideology and mentality 151 Conclusions 155 PART III 6 Studying history 159 Introduction 159 Reading 160 Note-taking 161 The kinds of works you read 163 Effective reading 165 The structure of reading history 168 Using the sources you read 170 Conclusions 176 7 Writing history (i): the essay 177 Introduction 177 Writing: some general points 177 Writing an essay 181 Statement and evidence 188 Conclusions 191

x CONTENTS 8 Writing history (ii): the dissertation 192 Introduction 192 Choosing a topic and preliminary work 193 Groundwork for dissertations 197 Writing the dissertation 199 Conclusions 201 9 History exadls 203 Introduction 203 Preparing properly 203 Topic assessment 204 Revision proper 205 Practising for exams 207 The question 207 Conclusions 210 Afterword 212 Suggestions for further reading 213 Index 219

Editors' preface IF you are studying history the chances are that you are looking for a book that will not only help you come to grips with the larger themes and issues behind historical study, but also a book that will help you formulate your own ideas in a clear, analytic style. The aim of Studying History is to offer you guidance on how to gain both of these important skills by providing the sort of vital information you need to understand history as a discipline and also by providing practical help and tips on how to write about history. The book is divided into three major sections. Part I deals with the scope of history and the different varieties of history, ranging from the traditional to the new. It provides you with the big picture of history, of how it has been thought of as a subject and how it has changed. Key ideas are explained and explored in a large framework so that you can gain a sense of the overall significance of history as a subject. Part II is concerned with the sources and methods of the historian, with the sort of theories and concepts historians make use of and bring to bear on documents and evidence. Part II thus acts as a complement to Part I: the move is from the large framework to the detailed work of history and its analytic thinking. Part III focuses on the practical business of studying history at A level or university. There is advice on how to take notes and organise your reading. Then come chapters on writing an essay and on how to tackle your dissertation. Finally there is a chapter of advice on history exams. Each part of the book can be read separately or dipped into for information or guidance. In the first instance, however, it may well xi

XU EDITORS' PREFACE repay you to read quickly through the book as a whole, so that you gain a sense of what history involves and how the essays you are asked to write grow out of the debates and discussions that characterise history as a subject. At once a guide to current ideas about history and a practical textbook that will develop your skills as an historian, Studying History is designed to help you get the most out of your course and to achieve excellent results. John Peck Martin Coyle

Preface CULTURES are like individuals: they take on meaning in terms of time passing. Memories of the past are the lodestars of our thoughts, collective and individual. We cannot leave the past: our own present will be someone else's past; our past was once the present. The passage of time, and its important effects, mean that everything will one day be history; that everything has a history. In this book we examine the multifaceted nature of history. We look at the nature of the subject, the manner in which historians have and do study the past and the way in which you can approach and study it. The book is a considered response of two practising historians, both teachers and researchers, to the complexities of the exciting and enlivening discipline of history. The range of our interests offers a number of complementary approaches and covers the major spheres of historical study. Our proactive text both explains the intellectual milieu of the historian and also supports students pursuing the subject. The first part offers introductory statements as to the nature of the discipline. It allows students to engage with some of the key terminologies used by historians over the years and provides a clear and comprehensive overview of the discipline. The second section focuses upon the way in which historians go about the study of history and encourages students to see themselves as engaged in the same process. It discusses the types of documents that historians use and considers the role of theory in the development of the historian's art. This section also considers how students should study themes or case-studies; structures and individuals; ideologies and mentalities. It also considers the importance of such things as facts and narratives in the writing of history. The chapters here also consider the developments of some of the most important schools of history so that Xlll

XlV PREFACE students can get a flavour of the diversity of historical understanding. Finally, this section blends the works of some key historians with an articulation of the methods and theories they employ. The third part sets out practical advice on how to study history. It draws on examples of historical works and explains the way historians analyse and interpret them. It offers students comprehensive guidance on the variety of historical study. It explains how to study documents and texts; how to read effectively; and how to write papers, essays and longer research-based papers, such as dissertations. Jeremy Black Don MacRaild