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Vast 1: Introduction

This document discusses how historians are shifting their focus from political events to longer periods of time to reveal deeper patterns and tendencies. It outlines the tools historians use for this type of analysis, including models of economic growth, demographic data, and the study of climate changes. It explains how this allows historians to distinguish different sedimentary layers or levels of analysis, with slower rhythms emerging at deeper levels beneath rapidly changing surface political events. The document notes how this is replacing older historical questions with new questions around isolating different strata, establishing types of series, adopting periodization criteria, and determining systems of relations between various series of events.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
52 views3 pages

Vast 1: Introduction

This document discusses how historians are shifting their focus from political events to longer periods of time to reveal deeper patterns and tendencies. It outlines the tools historians use for this type of analysis, including models of economic growth, demographic data, and the study of climate changes. It explains how this allows historians to distinguish different sedimentary layers or levels of analysis, with slower rhythms emerging at deeper levels beneath rapidly changing surface political events. The document notes how this is replacing older historical questions with new questions around isolating different strata, establishing types of series, adopting periodization criteria, and determining systems of relations between various series of events.

Uploaded by

Darmadi
Copyright
© Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as RTF, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Vast 1: Introduction

For many years now historians have preferred to turn their attention to long periods, as if, beneath the shifts and changes of political events, they were trying to reveal the stable, almost indestructible system of checks and balances, the irreversible processes, the constant readjustments, the underlying tendencies that gather force, and are then suddenly reversed after centuries of continuity, the movements of accumulation and slow saturation, the great silent, motionless bases that traditional history has covered with a thick layer of events. The tools that enable historians to carry out this work of analysis are partly inherited and partly of their own making: models of economic growth, quantitative analysis of market movements, accounts of demographic expansion and contraction, the study of climate and its long-term changes, the fixing of sociological constants, tile description of technological adjustments and of their spread and continuity. These tools have enabled workers in

tile historical field to distinguish various sedimentary strata; linear successions, which for so long had been tile object of research, have given way to discoveries in depth. From the political mobility at the surface down to the slow movements of 'material civilization', ever more levels of analysis have been established: each has its own peculiar discontinuities and patterns; and as one descends to the deepest levels, the rhythms become broader. Beneath the rapidly changing history of governments, wars, and famines, there emerge other, apparently unmoving histories: the history of sea routes, the history of corn or of gold-mining, the history of drought and of irrigation, the history of crop rotation, the history of the balance achieved by the human species between hunger and abundance. The old questions of the traditional analysis (What link should be made between disparate events? How can a causal succession be established between them? What continuity or overall significance do they possess? Is it possible to define a totality, or must one be content with reconstituting connexions?) are now being replaced by questions of another type: which strata should be isolated from others? What types of series should be established? What criteria of periodization should be adopted for each of them? What system of

relations (hierarchy, dominance, stratification, univocal determination, circular causality) may be established between them? What series of series may be established? And in what large-scale chronological table may distinct series of events be determined? At about the same time, in the disciplines that we call the history of ideas, the history of science, the history of philosophy, the history of thought, and the history of literature (we can ignore their specificity for the moment), ill those disciplines which, despite their names, evade very largely the work and methods of the historian,

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