Whither the grand narrative in historical scholarship? For years, critics have cautioned us that narratives are, in Hayden White\u27s words, little more than a form of emplotment whose order and coherence oversimplify the inherent messiness of the past. Yet the inconvenient fact remains that human beings are unparalleled storytelling creatures. Whether or not events occur in a narrative format, with a clear beginning, middle, and end, we tend to perceive them in this way-and to relate them in this structure to one another. Still, not all narratives are created equal. In keeping with the postmodern turn, historians have been increasingly drawn of late to quirky, eccentric tales, rendered more often than not as microhistories or in other, n...
This rich collection of essays is intellectually substantial, culturally significant, and much overd...
Gregory H. Nobles has produced a thoughtful, clearly written, thoroughly researched survey offering ...
The seventeen essays in this volume are intended, as Michael Malone says, to describe what has been...
Whither the grand narrative in historical scholarship? For years, critics have cautioned us that nar...
The New Western History is now old enough to have a history, observes Jerome Frisk, lead essayist o...
This is flat out the best, most inclusive, least partisan textbook on Western American history avail...
The influence of Frederick Jackson Turner\u27s conception of the Western frontier can be measured by...
In Frontiers of Historical Imagination, Kerwin Klein traces the changes in the historical discourse ...
After a couple of decades adrift in the horse latitudes, western history and attendant historiograph...
Review of: Frontiers of Historical Imagination: Narrating the European Conquest of Native America, 1...
Review of: The American West: A New Interpretive History. Hine, Robert V. and Faragher, John Mack
One learns to be suspicious of essay collections. Not only does article quality usually vary, but of...
Two decades ago, new western historians, led by Patricia Nelson Limerick in Legacy of Conquest, at...
No one is a more powerful spokesman for the New Western History than Donald Worster, and no western ...
In Telling Western Stories Richard Etulain has produced one of those rare combinations of a book tha...
This rich collection of essays is intellectually substantial, culturally significant, and much overd...
Gregory H. Nobles has produced a thoughtful, clearly written, thoroughly researched survey offering ...
The seventeen essays in this volume are intended, as Michael Malone says, to describe what has been...
Whither the grand narrative in historical scholarship? For years, critics have cautioned us that nar...
The New Western History is now old enough to have a history, observes Jerome Frisk, lead essayist o...
This is flat out the best, most inclusive, least partisan textbook on Western American history avail...
The influence of Frederick Jackson Turner\u27s conception of the Western frontier can be measured by...
In Frontiers of Historical Imagination, Kerwin Klein traces the changes in the historical discourse ...
After a couple of decades adrift in the horse latitudes, western history and attendant historiograph...
Review of: Frontiers of Historical Imagination: Narrating the European Conquest of Native America, 1...
Review of: The American West: A New Interpretive History. Hine, Robert V. and Faragher, John Mack
One learns to be suspicious of essay collections. Not only does article quality usually vary, but of...
Two decades ago, new western historians, led by Patricia Nelson Limerick in Legacy of Conquest, at...
No one is a more powerful spokesman for the New Western History than Donald Worster, and no western ...
In Telling Western Stories Richard Etulain has produced one of those rare combinations of a book tha...
This rich collection of essays is intellectually substantial, culturally significant, and much overd...
Gregory H. Nobles has produced a thoughtful, clearly written, thoroughly researched survey offering ...
The seventeen essays in this volume are intended, as Michael Malone says, to describe what has been...