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Metahistory: The Historical Imagination in Nineteenth-Century Europe
According to White the historian begins his work by constituting a chronicle of events which is to be organized into a coherent story. These are the two preliminary steps before processing the material into a plot which is argumented as to express an ideology. Thus the historical work is a verbal structure in the form of a narrative prose discourse that purports to be a model or icon of past structures and processes in the interest of explaining what they were by representing them.
Availability
| 13357 | 901 Whi m | Available |
Detail Information
| Series Title |
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| Call Number |
901 Whi m
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| Publisher | The Johns Hopkins University Press : Baltimore & London., 1973 |
| Collation |
xii + 448hlm; 15 x 23cm
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| Language |
English
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| ISBN/ISSN |
0-8018-1761-7
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| Classification |
901
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| Edition |
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| Specific Detail Info |
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| Statement of Responsibility |
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Other version/related
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