Second Editicon
The Uinversity of Chicago Press. 1994. - 481 p.
The Emergence of Greek Historiography
The Timeless Past of Gods and Heroes
Discovering a Past of Human Dimensions
The Era of the Polis and Its Historians
The New History of the Polis
The Decline of the Polis: The Loss of Focus
Reaching the Limits of Greek I-listoriography
The History of a Special Decade
Hellenistic Historiography: Beyond the Confines of the Polis
The Problem of New Regions and People
Early Roman Historiography
Myths, Greeks, and the R~epublic
An Early Past Dimly Perceived
The Roman Past and Greek Leaing
Greco-Roman History Writing: Triumph and a Latin Response
Historians and the RepubLic's Crisis
History as Inspiration and Structural Analysis
History Divorced from Rome's Fate
Perceptions of the Past in Augustan and Imperial Rome
History Writing in the "New Rome" of Augustus
Historians and the Empire
The Christian Historiographical Revolution
The Formulation of Early Christian Historiography
The Problem of Continuity in an Age of Upheaval
The Carolingian and Anglo-Saxon Consolidation in Historiography
The Historiographical Mastery of New Peoples, States, and Dynasties
Integrating Peoples into Latin Historiography
Legitimizing New States and Dynasties
Historians and the Ideal of the Christian Commonwealth
The Last Synthesis of Empire and Christianity
The Persistence of Christian Themes
Histories of a Grand and Holy Venture: The Crusades
Historiography's Adjustment to Accelerating Change
The Search for Developmental Pattes
Transformations of the Chronicle
Two Tuing Points
The Renaissance and The Reformation
The Italian Renaissance Historians
Humanist Revisionism Outside of Italy
The Collapse of Spiritual Unity
The Continuing Modification of Traditional Historiography
The Blending of Theoretical and Patriotic Answers
Universal History: A Troubled Tradition
Historians, the New Politics, and New Perceptions of the World
The Origin and Early Forms of American History
The Eighteenth-Century Quest for a New Historiography
The Reassessment of Historical Order and Truth
New Views on Historical Truth
New Grand Interpretations: Progress in History
New Grand Interpretations: The Cyclical Patte
Three National Responses
The British Blend of Erudition, Elegance, and Empiricism
Enlightenment Historiography in a German Key
Recording the Birth of the American Nation
Historians as Interpreters of Progress and Nation-I
German Historians: The Causes of Truth and National Unity
France: Historians, the Nation, and Liberty
Historians as Interpreters of Progress and Nation-II
English Historiography in the Age of Revolution
Historians and the Building of the American Nation
Historiography's "Golden Age"
A First Prefatory Note to Mode Historiography (1860-1914)
History and the Quest for a Uniform Science
Comte's Call to Arms and the Response
The German and English Responses to Positivist Challenges
The Peculiar American Synthesis
The Discovery of Economic Dynamics
An Economic Perspective on the Past
Karl Marx: Paneconoic Historiography
Economic History after Marx
Historians Encounter the l\1asses
Jubilant and Dark Visions
Social History as Institutional History
The American "New History": Call for a Democratic History
The Problem of World History
A Second Prefatory Note to Mode Historiography (since 1914)
Questions of Historical Truth-The Theoretical Discussion
The New Positivism and the Theory of History
Autonomous History and Its Theories
Two Recent Endeavors in "Scientific" History
History in the Language of Numbers
Psychohistory: A Promise and Many Problems
The Fading of the Paneconomic Model
Marxist Historiography: Ultimate Meaning or Another Method?
Reshaping Economic History
American and French Interpretations of Social History
American Progressive History
The Annales School
Redefinitions of Two National Historiographies
The Transformation of German Historiography
Historiography as a Mirror of Postwar America
The Enigma of World History
Progress and Westeization
The Multiple Cultures Model
World System Theories
The Uinversity of Chicago Press. 1994. - 481 p.
The Emergence of Greek Historiography
The Timeless Past of Gods and Heroes
Discovering a Past of Human Dimensions
The Era of the Polis and Its Historians
The New History of the Polis
The Decline of the Polis: The Loss of Focus
Reaching the Limits of Greek I-listoriography
The History of a Special Decade
Hellenistic Historiography: Beyond the Confines of the Polis
The Problem of New Regions and People
Early Roman Historiography
Myths, Greeks, and the R~epublic
An Early Past Dimly Perceived
The Roman Past and Greek Leaing
Greco-Roman History Writing: Triumph and a Latin Response
Historians and the RepubLic's Crisis
History as Inspiration and Structural Analysis
History Divorced from Rome's Fate
Perceptions of the Past in Augustan and Imperial Rome
History Writing in the "New Rome" of Augustus
Historians and the Empire
The Christian Historiographical Revolution
The Formulation of Early Christian Historiography
The Problem of Continuity in an Age of Upheaval
The Carolingian and Anglo-Saxon Consolidation in Historiography
The Historiographical Mastery of New Peoples, States, and Dynasties
Integrating Peoples into Latin Historiography
Legitimizing New States and Dynasties
Historians and the Ideal of the Christian Commonwealth
The Last Synthesis of Empire and Christianity
The Persistence of Christian Themes
Histories of a Grand and Holy Venture: The Crusades
Historiography's Adjustment to Accelerating Change
The Search for Developmental Pattes
Transformations of the Chronicle
Two Tuing Points
The Renaissance and The Reformation
The Italian Renaissance Historians
Humanist Revisionism Outside of Italy
The Collapse of Spiritual Unity
The Continuing Modification of Traditional Historiography
The Blending of Theoretical and Patriotic Answers
Universal History: A Troubled Tradition
Historians, the New Politics, and New Perceptions of the World
The Origin and Early Forms of American History
The Eighteenth-Century Quest for a New Historiography
The Reassessment of Historical Order and Truth
New Views on Historical Truth
New Grand Interpretations: Progress in History
New Grand Interpretations: The Cyclical Patte
Three National Responses
The British Blend of Erudition, Elegance, and Empiricism
Enlightenment Historiography in a German Key
Recording the Birth of the American Nation
Historians as Interpreters of Progress and Nation-I
German Historians: The Causes of Truth and National Unity
France: Historians, the Nation, and Liberty
Historians as Interpreters of Progress and Nation-II
English Historiography in the Age of Revolution
Historians and the Building of the American Nation
Historiography's "Golden Age"
A First Prefatory Note to Mode Historiography (1860-1914)
History and the Quest for a Uniform Science
Comte's Call to Arms and the Response
The German and English Responses to Positivist Challenges
The Peculiar American Synthesis
The Discovery of Economic Dynamics
An Economic Perspective on the Past
Karl Marx: Paneconoic Historiography
Economic History after Marx
Historians Encounter the l\1asses
Jubilant and Dark Visions
Social History as Institutional History
The American "New History": Call for a Democratic History
The Problem of World History
A Second Prefatory Note to Mode Historiography (since 1914)
Questions of Historical Truth-The Theoretical Discussion
The New Positivism and the Theory of History
Autonomous History and Its Theories
Two Recent Endeavors in "Scientific" History
History in the Language of Numbers
Psychohistory: A Promise and Many Problems
The Fading of the Paneconomic Model
Marxist Historiography: Ultimate Meaning or Another Method?
Reshaping Economic History
American and French Interpretations of Social History
American Progressive History
The Annales School
Redefinitions of Two National Historiographies
The Transformation of German Historiography
Historiography as a Mirror of Postwar America
The Enigma of World History
Progress and Westeization
The Multiple Cultures Model
World System Theories