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Useful Quotes and Notes (1 Viewer)

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[Historiography] Useful Quotes and Notes

I'm hoping others can contribute to this, but here's what I've got so far...

Notes:
The closest word for truth that the Greeks had was "alēthēs", which meant ‘not forgetting’ or ‘being in a state of not forgetting.’

Very few historical interpretations were ever recorded during classical times because History was discounted as an intellectual pursuit. (Note that Aristotle and other great minds disagreed with this believing it to be trashy).

Fernand Braudel is one of the key historians who embraced the scientific approach by pioneering economically and geographically focused views.

The Greeks had a different meaning for the words history and truth and the Romans had a very similar understanding of them. Truth is a concept that must be reviewed in context for each of the authors. The modern definition of truth is real, factual, accurate and definite . So for the modern works to be entirely truthful, each work would have to be unopinionated, unassuming and entirely accurate as well as seeing all opinions of history as they happened.

Also note... The Greek's heavy reliance on oral tradition makes it impossible to discriminate between the truth and myth as they were treated as the same thing – the most commonly told or most beautiful one was the most “true” because it wouldn’t be forgotten.

Quotes:

“Ancient writers, like historians ever since, could not tolerate a void [in their history], and they filled it in … ultimately by pure invention.”
-- Sir Moses Finley


"To history has been given the function of judging the past, of instructing men for profit of future years. The present attempt does not aspire to such lofty undertaking. It merely wants to show how, essentially, things happened."
-- Ranke.

And the last few words in German are, “wie es eigentlich gewesen” (how, essentially, things happened.)
-- Leopold von Ranke

“most people will not take trouble in finding out the truth”
-- Thucydides

The historical period “[was] not an artificial creation for the convenience of the historians … [but it had a] separate existence and even a ‘life cycle’ of their own.”
-- Murray

“The future is dark, the present burdensome; only the past, dead and finished, bears contemplation.”
-- Sir Geoffrey Elton

“… those historians who … tried to distinguish their profession by its own series educative purpose, nevertheless used a variety of devices the purpose which can only have been to add literary colour.”
-- Stephen Usher

“Herodotus may have been the father of history … a good many centuries the child he begot was to enjoy but a restricted and intermittent life.”
-- G.R. Elton



My personal conclusion (Note this may well be wrong)
Ultimately the differences between the ancient and modern studies of history are that modern writers attempt (as futile as it may be) to analyze label and organise a world which has long since departed and the ever changing perspectives are directly proportional to the contextual changes.
 
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Plebeian

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Copied verbatim from my notes, sorry if quote fragments don't make sense. Look up the context yourself, they're mostly from the book of readings.


Ancients – didactic / narrative / nationalist

Herodotus:
“record the astonishing achievements both of our own and of other peoples.”

Tacitus:
“ensure that merit is recorded and to confront evil deeds and words with fear of posterity’s denunciations”

Empiricists – historical truth / objectivity / source analysis

Elton:
“these things actually once happened, and it is now impossible to arrange them for the purpose of experiment”
“inability to know all the truth is not the same thing as total inability to know the truth”
“Historians are bound by the authority of these sources”

Windschuttle:
“Historians are not responsible for all the truth about everything that happened”

von Ranke:
“wie es eigentlich gewesen”, “to show what essentially happened”

Geyl:
“to show up the myths and tell the world all we can find about past reality”

Evans:
“the historian has to develop a detached mode of cognition, a faculty of self-criticism and an ability to understand another person’s point of view”
“reach some tenable though always less than final conclusions”

Appelby: “truths about the past are possible, even if they are not absolute, and hence are worth struggling for”

Relativists / Postmodernists – influence of perspective / post-structuralism / ideology

Carr:
“the element of interpretation enters into every facet of history”
facts “speak only when the historian calls on them”
“refracted through the mind of the recorder”
“an unending dialogue between the present and the past”

Groce:
“the history in reality refers to the present needs and present situations wherein those events vibrate”

Vincent:
“quite majestic powers of disconnection”
“Historians…visibly approve of the growth of the hand that fed them”
“their bias is not some shameful blot on their reputation, but no small part of the reputation itself”

Jenkins:
“Historical construction can be seen as taking place entirely in the present”
“historicised traces” form a “narrative prose discourse” …
“never the past itself”
“the content of any historical work is as much invented as found”
“simultaneously towards the once real events … and toward the narrative type mythoi”
 

wrong_turn

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thanks techie!! that was heaps of help!! i actually understand it a lot better
 

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