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History as Science and Politics: Experiments in Historiography and the Soviet Project

14.99 €
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History as Science and Politics: Experiments in Historiography and the Soviet Project
14.99 €
In basket
In the first decades of the 21st century, history is experiencing another “scientific turn”: the programs of biohistory, deep history, and Big History call on researchers to reconsider their ideas about the methodology of history and its evidence base, overcoming the traditional gap between the “two cultures” — the natural sciences and the humanities. In her book, Elena Aronova shows that various “scientific turns” have been proclaimed in historical science repeatedly since the emergence of professional history as an independent discipline.

The book is based on the fates of six 20th-century intellectuals and their large-scale programs: the philosopher of history Henri Berra, the politician and intellectual Nikolai Bukharin, the historian Lucien Febvre, and the biologists Nikolai Vavilov, Julian Huxley, and John Desmond Bernal. By tracing the intertwining of their scientific and life paths, the author places “scientific turns” in historical context and helps to understand how the ideas, methods, and practices of genetics, botany, or computer science became relevant to historians, as well as the influence of history on these sciences. Elena Aronova is a professor in the Department of History at the University of California, Santa Barbara.
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