
Contents
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The Contributors and Their Scope The Contributors and Their Scope
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The Import and Importance of History-Writing Today The Import and Importance of History-Writing Today
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Bibliography Bibliography
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Cite
Abstract
In this chapter Paul Cartledge discusses the import and importance of historiography and history-writing in the present day. He sets his discussion in the widest and longest chronological, ideological and professional contexts, tracing his own historiographical engagements ultimately to Herodotus and Thucydides, and more proximately to Oxford (G.E.M. de Ste. Croix, Sir John Boardman) and Cambridge Universities. Or from the—admirable, imitable—ancient Greek concern with truth and authenticity to the—lamentable—preoccupation with “post-truth,” in both academic (postmodernist) and non- (or anti-) academic circles and media, today. Truth is neither single nor simple, in historiography any more- or any less-than in almost any other intellectual sphere, but that is not a reason, he contends, to give up on it either as a practical goal or as a moral value. Rather the opposite.
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