Acknowledgements
Introduction
Chapter 1. Functions of Historiography until
the Mid-Nineteenth Century: A Short History of the Problem
Chapter 2. The Theoretical Design of a New
Justification
Chapter 3. Historical Thinking and the Genealogy
of the Present
Chapter 4. The Politics of Historical Thinking and
the Limits of the New Function
Concluding Remarks
Appendix: Droysen and his Theory of History
Bibliography
Arthur Alfaix Assisis Assistant Professor of the Theory and Methodology of History at the University of Brasília.
“Assis offers the reader a wide panorama of German historiography during the nineteenth century, centering on the debates about historicism, a dominant paradigm for German historical knowledge in the nineteenth century, and in the reformulation of pragmatic value for historiography. Arthur Assis' work is therefore not only directed at specialists or at researchers of Droysen's work, but at all those who study German and general historiography, intellectual history, and even political historiography, since it highlights the political influences of Droysen's thought.” · Revista Brasileira de História “…a work of deep erudition and a thorough historiographical investigation of the entire, although extremely vast, body of works by Droysen, as well as on the equally rich secondary literature… Assis’ monograph is extremely valuable, since, through a painstaking review of Droysen’s texts, it sheds light on the unsurpassable tension that can be found there between an epistemology of history, as an alternative model of any exemplary theory of history, and a historical-political thought that needed the examples of the past to find which actions had to be carried out in the present or the future.” · H-Soz-u-Kult “There is a great deal to admire about this study. The author is extraordinarily erudite: not only has he read carefully all of Droysen's work and mastered the secondary literature about him, he moves with ease across centuries of historiography… I learned a lot from the study about both Droysen and his place in modern historiography.” · James Sheehan, Stanford University “This is a thorough, original, and well-researched study of a major nineteenth-century historical thinker…Assis demonstrates with great clarity that Droysen saw no incompatibility between ‘studying history’, ‘thinking historically’, and ‘making history’. By situating the German historian both in his own time and in a long tradition of reflection on the uses and abuses of history, Assis’s book makes a welcome contribution to intellectual history, history of historiography, and historical theory.” · Herman Paul, Leiden University
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