SHOE Archives

Societies for the History of Economics

SHOE@YORKU.CA

Options: Use Forum View

Use Monospaced Font
Show Text Part by Default
Show All Mail Headers

Message: [<< First] [< Prev] [Next >] [Last >>]
Topic: [<< First] [< Prev] [Next >] [Last >>]
Author: [<< First] [< Prev] [Next >] [Last >>]

Print Reply
Subject:
From:
[log in to unmask] (Robin Foliet Neill)
Date:
Fri Mar 31 17:18:25 2006
Content-Type:
text/plain
Parts/Attachments:
text/plain (41 lines)
====================== HES POSTING ====================== 
 
        I note the process of Professor Gunning's reply. The process 
involves taking items in succession and interpreting or redefining them so 
that they serve a particular issue in the discourse.  This is one element 
in the historian's craft. [Should I say art?] What modern, or, in some 
instances, postmodern, historiographers do is note the variety of such 
elements and their effect on the issue of history [memory, recollection]. 
In the postmodern period, in consequence of the past and present 
multiplication of such elements, given the multitude of past and present 
cultures [mindsets, information environments, epistemes] of which we are 
now aware, history has become the history of historiography. 
 
        Turning this to the question of Whig history [Both words are 
adequately defined in most dictionaries.], and specifically the 
Whigishness of some historians of economics: that history selected its 
methods of recollection with a view to creating the future, not to 
recreating the past.  It was ethically active, in the first instance, and 
scientific, only in the second.  There is, of course, nothing wrong with 
that.  Indeed it is laudable.  Its just that it should be recognized for 
what it is. 
 
        There is much more to be said on this matter, and a great variety 
of things about which much more is to be said; but I refer the receivers 
of this message, again, to Hutton's HISTORY AS AN ART OF MEMORY.  Its not 
that Hutton has anything to say specifically to historians of economics, 
or that I think his is the last word, [or that he has given us a well 
constructed and well written book], but he does open up alternative 
approaches to history, and thereby he casts light on what one might make 
of Whigishness in economic history, or any other style, point of view, 
procedure, or bias in the writing of history. 
 
Merry Christmas. 
 
Robin Neill 
 
==================== FOOTER TO HES POSTING ==================== 
For information, send the message "info HES" to [log in to unmask] 
 
 

ATOM RSS1 RSS2