Historiography: Ancient, Medieval & Modern/ Ernest Breisach english
Material type:
- 978-0-226-07283-8
- 23 907.2 BRE
Item type | Current library | Collection | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
![]() |
Tetso College Library History | Non-fiction | 907.2 BRE (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 14503 |
Introduction
1The Emergence of Greek Historiography
2 The Era of the Polis and Its Historians
3 Reaching the Limits of Greek Historiography
4 Early Roman Historiography: Myths, Greeks, and the Republic
5 Historians and the Republic?s Crisis
6 Perceptions of the Past in Augustan and Imperial Rome
7 The Christian Historiographical Revolution
8 The Historiographical Mastery of New Peoples, States, and Dynasties
9 Historians and the Ideal of the Christian Commonwealth
10 Historiography?s Adjustment to Accelerating Change
11 Two Turning Points: The Renaissance and The Reformation
12 The Continuing Modification of Traditional Historiography
13 The Eighteenth-Century Quest for a New Historiography
14 Three National Responses
15 Historians as Interpreters of Progress and Nation?1
16 Historians as Interpreters of Progress and Nation?2
17 A First Prefatory Note to Modern Historiography
18 History and the Quest for a Uniform Science
19 The Discovery of Economic Dynamics
20 Historians Encounter the Masses
21 The Problem of World History
22 Historiography Between Two World Wars (1918?39)
23 History Writing in Liberal Democracies (1918?39)
24 Historiography and the Grand Ideologies
25 American Historiography after 1945
26 History in the Scientific Mode
27 Transformations in English and French Historiography
28Marxist Historiography in the Soviet Union and Western Democracies
29 Historiography in the Aftermath of Fascism
30 World History Between Vision and Reality
31 Historiography, Postmodernity and Prospects
There are no comments on this title.