Editors' Introduction
Part One: The Rise, Consolidation, and Crisis of European
Traditions
1: Stefan Berger: The Invention of European National Traditions in
European Romanticism
2: Georg G. Iggers: The Intellectual Foundations of
Nineteenth-Century 'Scientific' History: The German Model
3: Eckhardt Fuchs: Contemporary Alternatives to German Historicism
in the Nineteenth Century
4: Gabriele Lingelbach: The Institutionalization and
Professionalization of History in Europe and the United States
5: Lutz Raphael: Experiments in Modernization: Social and Economic
History
6: Peter Burke: Lay History: Official and Unofficial
Representations, 1800-1914
7: Antoon De Baets: Censorship and History, 1915-45: Historiography
in the Service of Dictatorships
Part Two: Historical Scholarship and National Traditions
8: Benedikt Stuchtey: German Historical Writing
9: Pim den Boer: Historical Writing in France, 1800-1914
10: Michael Bentley: Shape and Pattern in British Historical
Writing, 1814-1945
11: Ilaria Porciani and Mauro Moretti: The Polycentric Structure of
Italian Historical Writing
12: Xosé-Manoel Núñez: Historical Writing in Spain and Portugal,
1720-1930
13: Rolf Torstendahl: Scandinavian Historical Writing
14: Jo Tollebeek: Historical Writing in the Low Countries
15: Gyula Szvák: The Golden Age of Russian Historical Writing: The
Nineteenth Century
16: Monika Baár: East-Central European Historical Writing
17: Marius Turda: Historical Writing in the Balkans
Part Three: Europe's Offspring
18: Thomas Bender: Writing American History, 1789-1945
19: Donald Wright and Christopher Saunders: The Writing of the
History of Canada and of South Africa
20: Stuart Macintyre: Historical Writing in Australia and New
Zealand
21: D. A. Brading: Historical Writing in Mexico: Three Cycles
22: Ciro Flamarion Cardoso: Brazilian Historical Writing and the
Building of a Nation
23: Juan Maiguashca: Spanish South American Historians: Centre and
Periphery, 1840s-1940s
Part Four: Non-European Cultural Traditions
24: Axel Schneider and Stefan Tanaka: The Transformation of History
in China and Japan
25: Dipesh Chakrabarty: The Birth of Academic Historical Writing in
India
26: Anthony Milner: South East Asian Historical Writing
27: Cemal Kafadar and Hakan T. Kareteke: Late Ottoman and Early
Republican Turkish Historical Writing
28: Youssef M. Choueiri: Historical Writing in the Arab World
29: Toyin Falola: History in Sub-Saharan Africa
Stuart Macintyre was born and educated in Melbourne, Australia, and
completed his doctorate at Cambridge in 1975. In 1980 he returned
to the University of Melbourne and was appointed Ernest Scott
Professor of History at the University of Melbourne. He has served
terms as dean of the Faculty of Arts and President of the Academy
of the Social Sciences in Australia. Juan Maiguashca was born in
Ecuador and educated in the United States, France, and Britain. He
obtained
his doctorate at Oxford, St. Antony's College, in 1968. He has been
a research fellow at the London School of Economics and The Adlai
Institute of International affairs (University of Chicago).
From
1972 until his retirement he taught at the Department of History of
York University, Toronto, Canada. Attila PÓK is deputy director of
the Institute of History of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences in
Budapest and visiting professor of history at Columbia University
in New York. His publications and courses cover three major fields:
19th-20th century European political and intellectual history,
history of modern European historiography, theory and methodology
of history.
`unrolls the great map of mankind, displaying the historical
consciousness of the human race in all its varieties.
'
Jonathan Clark, Times Literary Supplement
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