Introduction: the bonfire of the humanities?; 1. Going forward by looking back: the rise of the longue durée; 2. The short past: or, the retreat of the longue durée; 3. The long and the short: climate change, governance and inequality since the 1970s; 4. Big questions, big data; Conclusion: the public future of the past.
A call to arms to historians and everyone interested in history in contemporary society. This title is also available as Open Access.
Jo Guldi is just beginning her disciplinary career as Assistant Professor of History at Brown University. She has held fellowships at the University of Chicago, the Harvard Metalab, and the Harvard Society of Fellows. She is author of Roads to Power: Britain Invents the Infrastructure State (2011) and What is the Spatial Turn? (2012), as well as various articles and blog posts on aspects of British property law and digital history. She is the designer of Papermachines.org, digital software designed to facilitate the visualization of large amounts of text for historical and political analysis. She has published in Counterpunch and The Huffington Post, and maintains a personal website at http://landscape.blogspot.com. Her next monograph, The Long Land War (thelonglandwar.com) will tell the story of the rise of transnational land grabs, rent strikes, and land reform movements since 1880. David Armitage is the Lloyd C. Blankfein Professor of History and Chair of the Department of History at Harvard University. He is the author or editor of thirteen books, including The Ideological Origins of the British Empire (2000), Foundations of Modern International Thought (2013), Milton and Republicanism (co-edited, 1995), Bolingbroke: Political Writings (edited, 1997), British Political Thought in History, Literature and Theory (co-edited, 2006) and Shakespeare and Early Modern Political Thought (co-edited, 2009), all from Cambridge University Press. A prize-winning author and teacher, he has lectured on six continents and his works have been translated into Chinese, Danish, French, Italian, Japanese, Portuguese and Spanish.
'This is a very important and refreshing book. For too long, we
have seen increasing specialization within historical research and
between the disciplines of social sciences. Armitage and Guldi
rightly plead for a return of the 'longue durée'. They call for
more global, long-run and transdisciplinary approaches to big
questions, including climate change, inequality and the future of
capitalism. Their book will be an important milestone in this
direction. A must-read.' Thomas Piketty, Paris School of
Economics
'This well-written, smart, deeply and broadly learned book is a
bracing challenge to contemporary historiography. Critical of the
loss of a sense of la longue durée and series, replaced by
histories of the 'short term' and micro-scale since the 1970s, the
authors argue that history has lost much of its public significance
and usefulness. David Armitage and Jo Guldi have produced a rich
history of the discipline as the foundation of a compelling plea
for bringing forth more bigger and better histories into our civic
life.' Thomas Bender, New York University
'Guldi and Armitage make a compelling argument for the relevance of
history, and for its potential as an antidote to the twin
afflictions of short-term thinking and future prognostication based
on poor or partial evidence. In a concise and clear book, they make
renewed claims for the capacity of the past and its data, properly
studied, to inform public policy and democratic debate on a wide
range of issues from economic malfunction to climate change. They
also throw out a challenge to academic historians to pull on, and
perhaps break, some disciplinary shackles that have mentally
fettered the profession for the better part of a century.' Daniel
Woolf, Queen's University, Ontario
'How can we think seriously about our grandchildren's future if no
one thinks on scales longer than a few years? Jo Guldi and David
Armitage tell a rich and swashbuckling story of how historians are
returning to big picture thinking, armed now with the rich insights
of microhistory and the vast archives of big data. In the Age of
the Anthropocene, they argue, it is vital that we know the past,
and that we know it at very large scales.' David Christian,
Macquarie University, Sydney
'History will always remain a craft with many workshops perfecting
different traditions, but here is a fast-paced manifesto which
urges the profession to focus on long-term questions and embrace
ethical obligations to provide urgently needed perspectives on key
dilemmas of our times. Its view of recent Anglo-American
historiography as 'short-termist' and passionate plea that history
can map out alternative possibilities for better societies will
invite controversy and instantly invigorate classroom debates with
a double shot.' Ulinka Rublack, University of Cambridge, and editor
of A Concise Companion to History
'An important attempt to make history relevant to a broad public,
away from the narrow specialization which has dominated the
historical profession to a long range nexus of past, present and
future which places the present global crises of ecology and
inequality in their historical context and takes into account the
impact of digitalization on historical studies.' Georg G. Iggers,
University at Buffalo, The State University of New York
'An exhilarating anticipation of a digitised and globalised future,
in which historians will assume the role of critical
problem-solver. Guldi and Armitage argue that to do so, historians
must recover their command of the longue durée and boldly apply
their grasp of multi-causality to the dominant practical
disciplines of the day.' John Tosh, University of Roehampton
'In their timely and useful book, Armitage and Guldi have issued a
call to arms. They urge historians to use their knowledge and
skills to think big, to embrace long term thinking and the
possibilities of digital technology. Above all they hope that an
increasingly fragmented discipline can embrace its public role and
take on, in an ethical, utopian spirit, some of the biggest issues
of our time, such as inequality and climate change. They make a
heartfelt plea for those who specialise in the past to make a major
contribution to thinking about the future. Their manifesto for
history as a critical social science deserves careful consideration
both by those already persuaded of its public purpose and by those
yet to embrace this generous view of the field.' Ludmilla
Jordanova, Durham University
'Of all the many ways in which public policies and public debates
today lack necessary perspective, perhaps the most important is
their lack of historical perspective. In The History Manifesto
David Armitage and Jo Guldi offer a ringing call not just for more
knowledge of the past, but for the centrality of a broad and deep
understanding of history to public knowledge itself.' Craig
Calhoun, London School of Economics and Political Science
'Big problems meet big data in this compelling case for long-term
thinking in the public sphere. Guldi and Armitage don't just chart
a new course for the discipline of history, but for the uses of
history across disciplines. I'm convinced: a return to the longue
durée is theoretically sound, technologically feasible, politically
imperative.' Bethany Nowviskie, University of Virginia
'Ideas about big and deep histories have been recently flagged as
ways historians could make their work speak to present concerns
about human futures. This wide-ranging and spirited book not only
provides the best discussion so far of these questions; by staking
the very future of history on historians' capacity to shape public
debates, Guldi and Armitage issue to fellow historians nothing
short of a stirring call to action. A welcome and timely
intervention.' Dipesh Chakrabarty, University of Chicago
'Concise, impassioned and readable.' Paul Lay, Literary Review
'For a very brief but enormously timely essay on why we need better
ways of thinking about our past The History Manifesto is excellent.
It demonstrates why we need history - in universities but also in
public discourse - and wonders provocatively why governments second
economists and the like to their service but never historians, who
have a distinct responsibility to underline complexity of social
causation, the need for long views and the dangers of narrating the
past from inside one or another kind of silo.' Rowan Williams, New
Statesman
'This volume (deliberately named a 'manifesto') urges historians to
reject short-time thinking as the overall temporal context of their
works because it makes them unable to understand and appreciate
modern long-time developments such as the despoilment of the earth
and oceans, inequalities in international relations, and the impact
of climatic changes. No less than a radical change away from
short-time to long-time thinking will do. Universities and
religions still have maintained long-time perspectives, but have
done so under great negative pressures. During recent decades,
historians' contributions have often disappointed expectations by
remaining in the short term as they favored primarily academic
(archival) narratives. Yet new scientific and digital technologies,
with their ability to reach far back in time, clearly favored the
long term, and the debate on time spans for history took on a new
vitality. This informative section of the book, especially helpful
with its extensive no
'The book is an eminently readable and thought-provoking account of
the broader repercussions of the various historical turns of the
twentieth and early twenty-first centuries, a helpful survey of
recent work utilizing new methodologies for incorporating Big Data
into historical research, and a healthy warning to students and
scholars of history on the importance of relating their work to the
big picture and broader public.' Hugh J. Turner, Divan: Journal of
Interdisciplinary Studies
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