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With twenty-nine new entries, and updated existing ones, this new edition provides a much-needed critical introduction to the key issues, historians and philosophers and their ideas and theories which have prompted the rethinking of history.
As one of the premier historical thinkers of his generation, Jörn Rüsen has made enormous contributions to the methods and theoretical framework of history as it is practiced today. In Evidence and Meaning, Rüsen surveys the seismic changes that have shaped the historical profession over the last half-century, while offering a clear, economical account of his theory of history. To traditional historiography Rüsen brings theoretical insights from philosophy, narrative theory, cultural studies, and the social sciences, developing an intricate but robust model of “historical thinking” as both a cognitive discipline and a cultural practice—one that is susceptible neither to naïve empiricism nor radical relativism.
Preliminary material /J. A. Emerton -- Joshua: The Hebrew and Greek Texts /A.G. Auld -- The Legal Background to the Restoration of Michal to David /Zafrira Ben-Barak -- Die List Joabs Und Der Sinneswandel Davids /R. Bickert -- Chronicles, Ezra, and Nehemiah: Theology and Literary History /Roddy L. Braun -- Les Aveugles Et Boiteux Jébusites /Gilbert Brunet -- David Et Le Ṣinnôr /Gilbert Brunet -- The Destruction of the Shiloh Sanctuary and Jeremiah VII 12, 14 /John Day -- The Israelite Tribes in Judges /Barnabas Lindars -- Jonathan at the Feast: A Note On the Text of 1 Samuel XX 25 /B. A. Mastin -- Was The Šālîš the Third Man in the Chariot? /B. A. Mastin -- Narrative Structure and Technique in the Deborah-Barak Story (Judges IV 4-22) /D.F. Murray -- The Philistine Incursions into the Valley of Rephaim (2 Sam. v 17 following) /N. L. Tidwell -- Notions of Historical Recurrence in Classical Hebrew Historiography /G. W. Trompf -- Salomo - Der Erstgeborene Bathsebas /T. Veijola -- The Origins of the Twenty-Four Priestly Courses /H. G. M. Williamson -- Authors Cited /J. A. Emerton -- References /J. A. Emerton.
We are now entering a new phase in the establishment of historical organization studies as a distinctive methodological paradigm within the broad field of organization studies. This book serves both as a landmark in the development of the field and as a key reference tool for researchers and students. For two decades, organization theorists have emphasized the need for more and better research recognizing the importance of the past in shaping the present and future. By historicizing organizational research, the contexts and forces bearing upon organizations will be more fully recognized, and analyses of organizational dynamics improved. But how, precisely, might a traditionally empirically o...
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This book is a greatly supplemented translation from Portuguese, originally published in 2015. It discusses the most appropriate ways to create databases for research on history and other humanities, including an extensive debate about the usages that historians have made of computing since the 1950s. It has four chapters: the first is dedicated to theoretical and methodical questions about the usage of databases in history; the second is about technical issues; the third presents the concept of research engineering (how to improve research in groups); the last is about the construction of databases. The author states that the use of technology in research in history and humanities should be preceded and mediated by theories and methods which deal with these disciplines and not by technical issues. The historian must know how to think “correctly” in order to use the technological tools in an autonomous way. The book provides a background, demonstrating how theory, methodology, and technique are always articulated in historical research, and will appeal to history students and researchers.
The Routledge Companion to Historical Studies provides a much-needed critical introduction to the major historians and philosophers together with the central issues, ideas and theories which have prompted the rethinking of history that has gathered pace since the 1990s. With twenty-nine new entries, and many that have been substantially updated, key concepts for the new history are examined through the ideas of leading thinkers such as Kant, Nietzsche, Croce, Collingwood, White, Foucault and Derrida, and subjects range over class, empiricism, hermeneutics, inference, relativism and technology. New entries for the second edition include: Carl Becker Frank R. Ankersmit Jean-Francois Lyotard gender justified belief the aesthetic turn race film biography cultural history critical theory and experimental history. With a revised introduction setting out the state of the discipline of history today, as well as an extended and updated bibliography, this is the essential reference work for all students of history.
First Published in 1979. The collection of writings brought together in this book was written within the last ten years in different circumstances and for different purposes. However, they have one thing in common: they were intended to shed new light, or strike new depths, or widen scope of knowledge on some aspects of Nigerian history in the context of the author’s researches.
The 25 contributions to this volume, largely reprinted from recent special issues of three information science journals devoted to historical topics, address an array of topics including Paul Otlet and his successors; techniques, tools, and systems; organizations and individuals; theoretical issues; and literature. Annotation copyrighted by Book News, Inc., Portland, OR