You the People: Introduction

The Roundtable, "You the People," is a rather unusual project for this journal. Normally the American Historical Review does not publish articles that address professional or pedagogical concerns--those more generally related to the practical side of history as opposed to historical schola...

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Published inThe American historical review Vol. 119; no. 3; p. 741
Main Authors Barreyre, Nicolas, Heale, Michael, Tuck, Stephen, Wawrzyczek, Irmina
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Oxford Oxford University Press 01.06.2014
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Summary:The Roundtable, "You the People," is a rather unusual project for this journal. Normally the American Historical Review does not publish articles that address professional or pedagogical concerns--those more generally related to the practical side of history as opposed to historical scholarship itself. The essays, however, produced by a group of historians working in the UK, Poland, France, Italy, Germany, the Republic of Ireland, the Netherlands, and Australia, offer what they imagine to be a novel perspective for most readers: reflections on what it means to be an American historian living and working in Europe. Here, Barreyre et al set out that the writing of history is influenced as much by the place in which it is written as by when it is written.
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ISSN:0002-8762
1937-5239