Modules
Module 4: Schools of History
José O Solá
Historiography is the study of how historians research and disseminate historical analysis and content.[1]
The discipline of history is made of many subdisciplines, each with its own methods, context, focus, and agenda.
Historians may look at the same historical moment, context, and even the same sources, but their research questions, methods, and positionality all influence the appearance of the final product. Alternatively, other historians focus on human agency and bottom-up social history like the lower panes that reflect people. There are also historians who use a mixture of methods and draw on several subdisciplines to make their arguments (see the middle panes).
Historiography is the analysis of the various factors that shape historical research and is a key part of any project. After all, we need to know what historians have already studied and argued before we can build on, adapt, or refute those arguments. Listen to or view one or two of the following overviews of historiography:
Emily Blanck, “Historiography, What is it?” Rowan University (2017). (6:11 minutes)
Includes the video “What is Historiography” by Kyle D. Stedham, Florida State University.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GSoc5MX0s8A
- Parts of the information in the module are from Dr. Shelly Rose, https://pressbooks.ulib.csuohio.edu/historicalthinkingandhistoriography/chapter/module-4/ ↵