Preface and acknowledgements
Introduction
Part I: Historiographical traditions in the world: A view of the eighteenth century
1. Where we begin?
2. The West.
3. The Middle East.
4. India.
5. East and South East Asia.
Part II: The advance of nationalism and nationalist history: The West, the Middle East and India in the nineteenth century.
6. Historiography in a revolutionary age between 1789 and 1848.
7. Nationalism and the transformation of Muslim historiography.
8. Nationalism and the transformation of Indian historiography.
Part III: Academic history and the shaping of historical profession: Transforming historical study in the nineteenthcentury West and East Asia.
9. The cult of science and the nation-state paradigm (184890).
10. The crisis of Confucian historiography and the creation of the modern historical profession in East Asia.
Part IV: Historical writings in the shadow of two world wars: The crisis of historicism and modern historiography.
11. The reorientation of historical studies and historical thought (18901914).
12. Historiography between Two World Wars (19181939).
Part V: The appeal of nationalist history around the world: Historical studies in the Middle East and Asia in the twentieth century.
13. Ottomanism, Turkism and Egyptianization: Nationalist History in the Middle East.
14. Nationalism, scientism, and Marxism: modern historiography in East and South East Asia.
15. Nationalist historiography in modern India.
Part VI: New challenges in the post-war period: from social history to postmodernism and postcolonialism.
16. The Cold War and the emergence of the New World Order.
17. Varieties of social history (19451968/70) in the West.
18. The 1970s and 1980s: the cultural turn and postmodernism.
19. Postcolonialism.
20. The ebb and flow of Marxist historiography in East and South East Asia.
21. Islamism and Islamic historiography: the Cold War and beyond.
22. Historiography after the Cold War, 19902007: A critical retrospect.
23. The globalization of the world.
24. The reorientation of historical studies.
Glossary.
Further reading.
Index.
Preface and acknowledgements
Introduction
Historiographical traditions in the world: A view of the eighteenth century
Where we begin?
- Transcultural comparisons
- Characteristics of historiographical thought in different cultures
The West
- Characteristics of Western historiography
- The emergence of an enlightenment worldview
- Erudition and critical historical scholarship
- Enlightenment historiography
- German forms of enlightenment
- The emergence of a republic of letters
- From universal history to eurocentric ideas of progress
- Concluding observations
The Middle East
- The rise of Islam and the origin of Muslim historiography
- Main styles in Muslim historiography
- The bureaucratization and secularization of historiography
- The decline of the Muslim world and Muslim historiography?
India
- Western views on Indian historical consciousness
- Indian forms of historical writing
- Social and intellectual transformations during the early modern period
East and South East Asia
- Shamanism and history: the origin of the shi
- The formation of Confucian historiography
- The history bureau and dynastic history
- The spread and influence of dynastic historiography
- To seek the truth from facts: the rise of evidential learning
The advance of nationalism and nationalist history: The West, the Middle East and India in the nineteenth century
Historiography in a revolutionary age between 1789 and 1848
- The political context
- Romanticism and historiography
- The impact of emergent nationalism on historiography
- The relationship between professional scholarship and nationalism
- The liberal reinterpretation of the Middle Ages
- The colonial perspective and historiography
- The decline of liberalism in historiography
- Ideas of progress and of crisis
- Hegels philosophy of history
Nationalism and the transformation of Muslim historiography
- The Muslim discovery of Europe
- Whose Pharaohs? (re)writing the history of Egypt
- National identity and historical writing
- Bridging the old and the new: the encyclopedists and the neo-chroniclers
Nationalism and the transformation of Indian historiography
- Historiography during early colonialism
- The new pedagogy and the emergence of a modern historical consciousness
- Religious revivalism and the search for a glorious past
- The birth of the rationalist paradigm
- The birth of the nationalist paradigm
- Nationalism, communalism, and historical writing
- Secular narratives and the emergence of economic nationalism
Academic history and the shaping of historical profession: Transforming historical study in the nineteenthcentury West and East Asia
The cult of science and the nation-state paradigm (184890)
- The political context of historiography
- The social context of historiography
- The turn to scientific history
The crisis of Confucian historiography and the creation of the modern historical profession in East Asia
- Accommodating the Western influence
- Civilization and history: a new worldview
- The interplay of the old and the new
- George Zerffi, Ludwig Riess and the Rankean influence in Japan
- Japans Orient and the changing of the sinitic world
Historical writings in the shadow of two world wars: The crisis of historicism and modern historiography
The reorientation of historical studies and historical thought (18901914)
- The changing political and cultural climate
- The challenge to traditional historiography
- The existential crisis of modern civilization
Historiography between Two World Wars (19181939)
- The historians in World War I
- The critique of rationality and modernity and the defenders of the enlightenment
The appeal of nationalist history around the world: Histori in the Middle East
- The rise of modern education
- Writing Turkish history in/for modern Turkey
- The Egyptianization of historical writing
- Academic history and national politics
Nationalism, scientism, and Marxism: modern historiography in East and South East Asia
- New historiography in China
- The tension between national history and scientific history
- Modifying the Rankean model: national history in Japan
- Myth and history: in search of the origin of the Korean nation
- War and revolution: the appeal of Marxist historiography
Nationalist historiography in modern India
- Late nineteenthcentury antecedents: romantic nationalism
- The role of religion in nationalist historiography
- The nation as history and history as science
- The romance of the local and the emergence of alternative narratives
- The nation re-imagined: the Nehruvian synthesis
- Post-independence historiography: old and new trajectories
- Towards a social science history
New challenges in the postwar period:from social history to postmodernism and postcolonialism
The Cold War and the emergence of the New World Order
Varieties of social history (19451968/70) in the West
- The United States: from consensus to the New Left
- France: the Annales
- Germany: from Historismus to a critical historical social science
- Marxist historiography between orthodoxy and new directions
The 1970s and 1980s: the cultural turn and postmodernism
- From social science history to the cultural turn
- Micro-history, the history of everyday life, and historical anthropology
- Oral history and the history of memory
- The history workshop movement
- Feminist and gender history
Postcolonialism
- The subaltern studies
- Latin America: from Dependencia theory to subaltern studies
- The emergence of modern historiograph historical writings in late twentiethcentury Asia and the Middle East
The ebb and flow of Marxist historiography in East and South East Asia
- Reinventing Japan: post-war reform of historical education and writing
- The dominance of Marxist historiography in the Peoples Republic of China
- Challenges to Marxist historiography and eurocentrism
- Between Marxism and Nationalism: academic history in Vietnam
- The resurgence of national history
- The Annales School, postmodernism, and new changes in Japanese historiography
- Chinas search for alternatives to Marxist historiography
Islamism and Islamic historiography: the Cold War and beyond
- Globalizing Islamic historiography
- The interplay of history and historiography
- Edward Said and the critique of Orientalism
- The appeal of Marxism and Socialism
- The Islamic Revival Islamism and nationalism
- History and politics: the challenges of nationalist historiography
Historiography after the Cold War, 19902007: A critical retrospect
The globalization of the world
The reorientation of historical studies
- The cultural and the linguistic turn
- Feminist and gender history
- Redefining the alliance between history and social sciences
- New challenges to nationalist history
- World history, global history and history of globalization
Glossary
Further reading
Index