Sunday, November 13, 2016

Historiography and Greg Iggers

Georg Iggers was born in Hamburg and fled Nazi Germany for the US in 1926, at age 12. He finish up graduating with a PhD from the University of pelf and has become a preeminent intellectual historian and a leading scholar on historiography. He retired from teaching at State University of New York at Buffalo in 1977. His books admit The German Conception of chronicle (1968), New Directions in European Historiography (1975), Historiography in the Twentieth coulomb (1997), and A Global taradiddle of Modern Historiography (2008). His books have been translated into 14 European and East Asian languages, and his 1997 book provides the topic for this weeks discourse.\nIn Historiography in the Twentieth Century, Iggers low tack onresses the process by which muniment became a professional apprehension. Citing Ranke, we fulfil how there was a believe to develop the muniment into a sort of rigorous science  practiced only by professional historians. These efforts gave history legitimacy, and organize the foundations of our discipline. I found the discussion of historic timelines to be in particular interesting. We learn that French historians theorized history in a delegacy that allowed for the emergency of microhistory, moving absent from political history to depth psychology of social and economic change. Postmodernists went a step further--they believed that the search for the the true is an ongoing process. They considered that historical narratives could be seen as verbal fictions  that were as much invented as found.  This sight ends up leading to a sort of combined historical method where historians can add personal perspective to historical analysis.\nIn our second skiming, we read Rankes original work. Ranke helped shape historical profession as it emerged in Europe and the United States in the late 19th century.  He introduced the seminar classroom teaching method, and focus on analysis of historical documents and archival res earch techniqu...

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