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Perfectly describes the historical method and how it contributes to our current life.
Typology: Lecture notes
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Ma. Florina Orillos-Juan, Ph.D****. Department of History De la Salle University Manila [email protected]
This powerpoint presentation may be used as a reference but please make the necessary acknowledgment and documentation of your source.
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I. History as Reconstruction
II. The Historical Method
III. Historical Sources [Written and Non- written; Primary and Secondary]
IV. Historical Criticism [External and Intenal]
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the historian is many times removed from the events under investigation
historians rely on surviving records
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“Only a part of what was observed in the past was remembered by those who observed it; only a part of what was remembered was recorded ; only a part of what was recorded has survived ; only a part of what has survived has come to the historian’s attention .” Louis Gottschalk, Understanding History 5
“Only a part of what is credible has been grasped , and only a part of what has been grasped can be expounded or narrated by the historian.”
Louis Gottschalk, Understanding History^6
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Historians have to verify sources, to date them, locate their place of origin and identify their intended functions
The process of critically examining and analyzing the records and survivals of the past
Louis Gottschalk, Understanding History 8
Sources – an object from the past or testimony concerning the past on which historians depend in order to create their own depiction of that past. Howell and Prevenier, From Reliable Sources an Introduction to Historical Method
Tangible remains of the past Anthony Brundage, Going to Sources 9
1. Published materials
Books, magazines, journals, Travelogue transcription of speech
2. Manuscript [any handwritten or typed record that has not been printed] Archival materials Memoirs, diary (^10)
Oral history
Artifact
Ruins
Fossils
Art works
Videorecordings
Audiorecordings (^11)
Testimony of an eyewitness
A primary source must have been produced by a contemporary of the event it narrates
Louis Gottschalk, Understanding History^12
A primary source is a document or physical object which was written or created during the time under study.
These sources were present during an experience or time period and offer an inside view of a particular event.
http://www.princeton.edu/~refdesk/primary2.h
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Primary sources are characterized by their content , regardless of whether they are available in original format , in microfilm/microfiche , in digital format , or in published format.
http://www.yale.edu/collections_collaborative/primarysources/primarysources.html
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A secondary source interprets and analyzes primary sources. These sources are one or more steps removed from the event. Secondary sources may have pictures, quotes or graphics of primary sources in them. http://www.princeton.edu/~refdesk/primary2.html (^16)
Examples: History textbook Printed materials (serials, periodicals which interprets previous research)
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Topic: Tejeros Convention Primary Source : Santiago Alvarez’ account Secondary Source : Teodoro Agoncillo’s Revolt of the Masses
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In order for a source to be used as evidence in history, basic matters about its form and content must be settled
1. External Criticism 2. Internal Criticism
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The problem of authenticity
To spot fabricated , forged , faked documents
To distinguish a hoax or misrepresentation
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e.g. handwriting, signature, seal Louis Gottschalk, Understanding History 21
e.g. idiom, ortography, punctuation
e.g. too early, too late, too remote
5. Provenance or custody
e.g. determines its genuineness Louis Gottschalk, Understanding History^22
6. Semantics – determining the meaning of a text or word 7. Hermeneutics – determining ambiguities
Louis Gottschalk, Understanding History
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The Problem of Credibility Relevant particulars in the document – is it credible?
Verisimilar – as close as what really happened from a critical examination of best available sources Louis Gottschalk, Understanding History^24
e.g. to determine his reliability; mental processes, personal attitudes
e.g. handwriting, signature, seal Louis Gottschalk, Understanding History 25