Fall 2006
218EPB Thursdays 1:30-3:20 p.m.
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Instructor |
Phone |
335-2287 |
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Office |
SH280 |
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Office Hours |
Thursdays 12:00-1:00, 3:45-5:00 p.m., and by appt. |
URL |
This course introduces new graduate students to their lifelong professional inquiry into the question “What is history?” The class is divided into three units. The first explores the animating question of our profession from theoretical and philosophical perspectives through the reading of both classic and recent texts on the subject. The second unit delves into some of the more widespread methodological approaches to history during the past couple of decades. Finally, in the third unit, you get you feet wet in the historiography of your own subject of research. You will produce a 15-page historiographical paper on a subject that you hope to pursue for your MA thesis.
Required Books (available at IMU Bookstore):
Booth, Wayne
C., Joseph M. Williams, Gregory G. Colomb. The Craft of Research.
Carr, Edward
Hallet. What Is History?
Gaddis, John
Lewis. The Landscape of History.
Iggers, Georg
G. Historiography in the Twentieth Century: From Scientific Objectivity to the
Postmodern Challenge.
Powell, James. Postmodernism for Beginners. Writers and Readers, 1997.
Robin, Ron.
Scandals and Scoundrels: Seven Cases that Shook the Academy.
Recommended Book:
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