
Truth in History
Oscar Handlin(Author)
Routledge (Publisher)
1st Edition
Published on 30. June 1997
Book
Paperback/Softback
458 pages
978-1-56000-951-1 (ISBN)
Description
Like scholars in other fields, historians have long occupied themselves in self-justification. In a society which calibrates all measures by a single standard, the proof of scientific worth became relevance, which in turn was interpreted as a search not for truth but for political correctness. In a blistering professional critique of this tendency in academic scholarship, perhaps the first of its kind, Oscar Handlin offers an analysis that, if anything, has grown more pertinent over the past decade.
In seventeen chapters, written with the brilliant assurance of a master craftsman, Handlin shows why the turn to partisanship and meaning has undermined the calling of historical research. As his new introduction makes clear, partisanship has taken the best and brightest from the field into different callings. Both widely heralded upon its initial appearance as well as attacked with vigor, Truth in History emanates from a half-century's experience of reading, writing, teaching, researching, and publishing in history and related disciplines. The passage of time has only confirmed the concerns of Handlin and the accuracy of his predictions for the field. This book will be valuable for sociologists, economists, political scientists, and historians. It is a must read for those who contemplate a life of scholarship in liberal arts.
In seventeen chapters, written with the brilliant assurance of a master craftsman, Handlin shows why the turn to partisanship and meaning has undermined the calling of historical research. As his new introduction makes clear, partisanship has taken the best and brightest from the field into different callings. Both widely heralded upon its initial appearance as well as attacked with vigor, Truth in History emanates from a half-century's experience of reading, writing, teaching, researching, and publishing in history and related disciplines. The passage of time has only confirmed the concerns of Handlin and the accuracy of his predictions for the field. This book will be valuable for sociologists, economists, political scientists, and historians. It is a must read for those who contemplate a life of scholarship in liberal arts.
More details
Language
English
Place of publication
New York
United States
Publishing group
Taylor & Francis Inc
Target group
College/higher education
Professional and scholarly
Dimensions
Height: 229 mm
Width: 152 mm
Thickness: 25 mm
Weight
661 gr
ISBN-13
978-1-56000-951-1 (9781560009511)
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Schweitzer Classification
Other editions
Additional editions



Person
Oscar Handlin
Content
Personal Reflections on a Calling; 1 A Discipline in Crisis; 2 Living in a Valley; The Central Themes of American History; 3 A History of American History; 4 Theories of Historical Interpretation; 5 Historical Criticism; 6 An Instance of Criticism; Dealing with the Evidence; 7 How to Read a Word; 8 How to Count a Number; 9 Seeing and Hearing; 10 History in a World of Knowledge; Persistent Themes and Hard Facts; 11 Political Theory and Popular Thought; 12 Man and Magic; 13 Good Guys and Bad; 14 The Two-Party System; The Uses of History; 15 The Diet of a Ravenous Public; 16 Ethnicity and the New History; 17 The Uses of History