Detalls del llibre
Gaddis points out that while the historical method is more sophisticated than most historians realize, it doesn't require unintelligible prose to explain. Like cartographers mapping landscapes, historians represent what they can never replicate. In doing so, they combine the techniques of artists, geologists, paleontologists, and evolutionary biologists. Their approaches parallel, in intriguing ways, the new sciences of chaos, complexity, and criticality. They don't much resemble what happens in the social sciences, where the pursuit of independent variables functioning with static systems seems increasingly divorced from the world as we know it. So who's really being scientific and who isn't? This question too is one Gaddis explores, in ways that are certain to spark interdisciplinary controversy.
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-modernist claims that we can't know anything at all about the past. It will be essential reading for anyone who reads, writes, teaches, or cares about history.
- Autor/a John Lewis Gaddis
- ISBN13 9780195171570
- ISBN10 0195171578
- Pàgines 192
- Any Edició 2026
- Fecha de publicación 03/05/2026
- Idioma Alemany, Francès
Ressenyes i valoracions
Landscape of History: How Historians Map the Past (Alemany, Francès)
- De
- John Lewis Gaddis
- |
- Oxford University Press (2026)
- 9780195171570



