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The historian's toolbox : a student's guide to the theory and craft of history / Robert C. Williams.
LIBRA D16 .W62 2012
Available from offsite location
- Format:
- Book
- Author/Creator:
- Williams, Robert C. (Robert Chadwell), 1938-
- Language:
- English
- Subjects (All):
- History--Methodology.
- History.
- History--Research.
- Physical Description:
- xvi, 230 pages : illustrations, map ; 24 cm
- Edition:
- Third edition.
- Place of Publication:
- Armonk, N.Y. : M.E. Sharpe, [2012]
- Summary:
- The Historian's Toolbox introduces students to the theory, craft, and methods of history and equips them with a series of tools to help them research and understand the past. Written in an engaging and entertaining style, and filled with fascinating examples, this best-selling "how to" book opens up an exciting world of historical research.
- Two new chapters in this third edition expand the repertory of tools and techniques available to students entering the workshop of history. "New Tools: GIS and CSI" introduces new methods of investigation-borrowed from geography and forensics-that have enabled researchers to challenge long-standing interpretations based on incorrect assumptions about past events. "TMI: Too Much Information" reminds readers that "more and faster" access to information does not lead to "better" results unless the researcher is also steeped in the conventions of the historian's craft.
- The Historian's Toolbox demonstrates the relevance and expanding possibilities of the study of history in our cacophonous information age. This updated edition will resonate with a new generation of readers. Book jacket.
- Contents:
- Part I The Craft of History
- 1 The Past 3
- 2 Story 7
- 3 History 11
- 4 Metahistory 20
- 5 Antihistory 27
- 6 The Present 33
- 7 The Future 39
- Part II The Tools of History
- 8 Doing History: An Overview 47
- 8.1 Choosing a Good Paper Topic 47
- 8.2 Reading History 48
- 8.3 Taking Notes 51
- 8.4 How to Write a Good History Paper 52
- 9 Sources and Evidence 56
- 9.1 Primary and Secondary Sources 56
- Primary Source: The Wannsee Protocol (1942) 57
- Secondary Source: Denying History: Who Says the Holocaust Never Happened and Why do they say it? (2000) 57
- Summary 59
- 9.2 Documents 59
- A Revolutionary War Ancestor's Pension Application (1832) 59
- 9.3 Maps 61
- Sebastian Munster's Map of the Americas, c: 1540 61
- 9.4 Artifacts 64
- Digging Ancient Moscow 64
- 9.5 Images 66
- Sharpshooter's Home or Photographer's Studio? 67
- 9.6 Cliometrics: Using Statistics to Prove a Point 70
- The Black Population of Colonial America 70
- 9.7 Genetic Evidence 72
- Welsh and Basques, Relatively Speaking 73
- Thomas Jefferson and Sally Hemings - What's My Line? 74
- 10 Credit and Acknowledgment 79
- 10.1 Notes 79
- 10.2 Bibliography 81
- Styling your Bibliography 81
- Types of Bibliographies 82
- A Selective, Annotated Bibliography 82
- 10.3 Acknowledging Sources and Avoiding Plagiarism 83
- 10.4 Professional Plagiarism: How Not to Do History 86
- 11 Narrative and Explanation 91
- 11.1 The Language of the Historian 91
- Paul Revere and the New England Village 92
- 11.2 Chronology 95
- The Life of Margaret Fuller 97
- 11.3 Narrative 100
- Pickett's Charge at Gettysburg 100
- 11.4 Argument 104
- "'Little Women' Who Helped Make This Great War" 105
- 11.5 Causation 106
- 11.6 The Reasons Why 108
- Explaining the Mann Gulch Fire of August 5,1949 109
- 12 Interpretation 112
- 12.1 Reviewing History 112
- Bellesiles's Arming America 113
- 12.2 Historical Revision 116
- The Denmark Vesey Slave Conspiracy (1822) 116
- 12.3 Historiography 119
- World War II 120
- 12.4 Women's History: The Leo Frank Case 124
- 13 Speculation 128
- 13.1 Historical Speculation 128
- Will the Real Martin Guerre Please Get an Identity? 128
- 13.2 History as Fiction 130
- The Soldier Who Never was 131
- 13.3 Conspiracies 133
- Who Really Really Killed Lincoln? 133
- 13.4 Forgeries and Facsimiles 136
- Is a Document Genuine? 136
- Is a Collection of Documents Authentic? 138
- How Can Forgeries Influence History? 138
- Is a Newly Discovered Collection by a Well-Known Author Authentic? 139
- If it is a Forgery, Who is the Forger? 139
- 13.5 Fiction as History 141
- 13.6 Film as History: Fact or Fiction? 143
- Films Can Help the Historian Understand the Past 144
- Films Can Hinder Our Understanding of the Historical Past 145
- Part III The Relevance of History
- 14 Everyday History 151
- 14.1 Studying Ordinary People 151
- The Burgermeister's Daughter 151
- 14.2 Everyone's a Historian 153
- 15 Oral History 156
- 15.1 The Perils of Memory 156
- 15.2 Interviewees and Interviewers 158
- The WPA Slave Narratives 159
- 15.3 Techniques of Oral History 161
- 16 Material Culture 164
- 16.1 Spirits in the Material World 165
- Richard Bushman and The Refinement of America 165
- 16.2 Studying Material Culture 167
- 17 Public History 170
- 17.1 History Beyond the Ivory Tower 170
- 17.2 History and the Public 172
- The Enola Gay Controversy 172
- 18 Event Analysis 177
- 18.1 History in Real Time 177
- The Iraq War: Munich, Mukden, or Mexico? 178
- 19 New Tools: GIS and CSI 182
- 19.1 Spatial History: Geographic Information Systems 182
- 19.2 Killer App: Crime Scene Investigation Forensics 184
- 20 History on the Internet 187
- 20.1 Using the Internet: Promises and Pitfalls 187
- 20.2 Wikipedia and "Wikiality" 189
- 20.3 Blogging the Past (and Present) 191
- 21 TMI: Too Much Information 193
- 21.1 History as Information 193
- 21.2 Hacking History: The Deluge of WikiLeaks 196
- 21.3 Private Parts: The Intrusion of History 199
- 22 Epilogue: The Persistence of History 202.
- Notes:
- Includes bibliographical references and index.
- Local Notes:
- Acquired for the Penn Libraries with assistance from the Isaac Norris Library Fund.
- ISBN:
- 0765633264
- 9780765633262
- OCLC:
- 731009620
- Publisher Number:
- 99949263044
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