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Dust

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Dust is a witty and highly original investigation into the development of modern history writing. This book considers how history writing belongs to the currents of thought shaping the modern world...
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  • 31 January 2002
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In this witty, engaging and challenging book, Carolyn Steedman has produced a highly original and sometimes irreverent investigation into the development of modern history writing. Dust is about the practice and writing of history. Dust considers the immutable, stubborn set of beliefs about the material world, past and present, inherited from the nineteenth century, with which modern history writing attempts to grapple. Drawing on over five years worth of her own published and unpublished writing, the author has produced a sustained argument about the way in which history writing belongs to the currents of thought shaping the modern world.

Steedman begins by looking at the attention paid to the archive by those working in the humanities and social sciences in recent years, what has become known as the practice of ‘archivisation’. By definition, the archive is the repository of 'that which will not go away', and the book goes on to suggest that, just like dust, the ‘matter of history’ can never go away or be erased.

Historians who want to think about what it is they do will find this work enlightening, and this book is essential reading for all undergraduates and postgraduates studying historiography, and history and theory.

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Price: £12.99
Pages: 208
Publisher: Manchester University Press
Imprint: Manchester University Press
Series: Encounters: Cultural Histories
Publication Date: 31 January 2002
ISBN: 9780719060151
Format: Paperback
BISACs:

HISTORY / Historiography, History, HISTORY / Social History, Social and cultural history

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Acknowledgements
Preface
1. In the Archon's house
2. 'Something she called a fever'
3. The magistrates
4. The space of memory: In an archive
5. Middlemarch: Without benefit of archive
6. What a rag rug means
7. On how the end is different from an ending
8. The story of Dust