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  1. Vor 5 Tagen · Written in the tradition of Marc Bloch and E.H. Carr, The Landscape of History is at once an engaging introduction to the historical method for beginners, a powerful reaffirmation of it for practitioners, a startling challenge to social scientists, and an effective skewering of post-modernistclaims that we can't know anything at all ...

  2. 29. Mai 2024 · The Landscape of History: How Historians Map the Past provides a searching look at the historian's craft, as well as a strong argument for why a historical consciousness should matter to us today. John Lewis Gaddis points out that while the historical method is more sophisticated than most historians realize, it doesn't require ...

    • Oxford University Press
  3. "The Idea of History" By R. G. Collingwood "The Landscape of History: How Historians Map the Past" By John Lewis Gaddis But I haven't read them yet so I don't if they're precisely what I'm looking for.

  4. Vor 6 Tagen · Historians use historical maps for several purposes: - As tools for reconstructing the past, to the extent that maps provide records of features, landscape, cities, and places that may not exist any more or that exist in dramatically transformed form. - As records of certain historical processes and relationships. Maps of trade ...

  5. 20. Juni 2024 · Making History argues that historians have damagingly dissociated the discipline of history from the everyday nature of history, defining their work only in scholarly terms. Exploring the relationship between history and society, Kalela makes the case for a more participatory historical research culture, in which historians take ...

  6. 20. Juni 2024 · By taking historical atlases as his primary theme, Jeremy Black hopes to make historians more critical of the processes by which such texts are constructed; and to show how an historian might find more in a map than mere illustration.

  7. 20. Juni 2024 · Mapping Past Societies, a free digital atlas hosted by the Initiative for the Science of the Human Past at Harvard, illuminates just a few of these patterns. “It has a rich dataset of historic, economic, archaeological, environmental, and health information as well as climate data going back much further,” said Santiago Pardo Sánchez ’16, the project’s co-managing editor.