Dear Bob,

As you may know, Mark Blaug has published a collection of papers on 
the Historiography of the HET.

http://www.e-elgar.co.uk/bookentry_main.lasso?id=632

The book was published in circa 1990, so it should be supplemented by 
more recent one. You might find the following relevant.

Klaes, Matthias. "Historiography." A Companion to the History of 
Economic Thought. Samuels, Warren J., Jeff E. Biddle and John B. Davis 
(eds). Blackwell Publishing, 2003.

with best,
Masazumi

On Wed, 6 Aug 2014 16:27:44 +0100
  Robert Cord <[log in to unmask]> wrote:
> Dear all
> 
> Given the ongoing debate about how students (and possibly teachers) 
>should
> be more exposed to history of economic thought, I've been thinking 
>about
> ways of how this may be achieved. One possibility might be to put 
>together
> a collection of reprints of classic articles and chapters which 
>examine
> the subject itself (e.g. why it should be studied, methodology, 
>etc.)
> and/or classic pieces which have examined specific HET
> episodes/periods/ideas. And so my inevitable question to the list: 
>What
> should, and should not, be included in such a volume?
> 
> All the best
> 
> Bob