History is NOT "Objective" | Historiography

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The ever-changing nature of history is an often misunderstood concept. This, and the question of "objectivity" in history are fundamental theoretical concepts any historian must have an understanding of.

I'll give a brief introduction to these concepts, and quote from respected historians, whom you can read more from in order to understand these concepts at a higher level.

Some of the books I reference are frequently used in graduate and undergraduate studies of history.

If you do, my recommendation is John Lewis Gaddis' Landscape of History.


Sources:

Adam Tooze, Wages of Destruction.
Roderick Stackelberg, Hitler's Germany.
John Lewis Gaddis, Landscape of History.
Edward Callett Carr, What is History?
Peter Novick, The Noble Dream: The "Objectivity Question"
Cronon, A Place For Stories: Nature, History and Narrative., in the Journal of American History, March 1992.

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