Family History and Historians in Australia and New Zealand

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Australia
Australia's Past
Australian Domestic Students
Australian Genealogy
Australian National University
Australia’s Past
Average Inbreeding Coefficient
biographical methodology
Category=GBC
Category=NH
Category=NHTG
Category=WQY
Colonial South Australia
Cousin Marriage
DNA ancestry analysis
DNA Information
DNA Match
DNA Testing
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eq_history
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Family historians
Family History Projects
Family History Research
genealogical research
Genetic Genealogy
historical pedagogy
historiography
Inbreeding Coefficient
interdisciplinary approaches to family history
Knowledge Acquisition
National Biography
National Collaboration
National Library
New Zealand scholars
NSW Government
NSW's Education
NSW’s Education
Ongoing Settler Colonialism
Professional historians
Public Historians
public history
Van Diemen's Land
Van Diemen’s Land
Vice Versa
Young Man

Product details

  • ISBN 9781032023298
  • Weight: 335g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 09 Jan 2023
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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Since the turn of the twenty-first century, family history is the place where two great oceans of research are meeting: family historians outside the academy, with traditionally trained, often university-employed historians. This collection is both a testament to dialogue and an analysis of the dynamics of recent family history that derives from the confluence of professional historians with family historians, their common causes and conversations. It brings together leading and emerging Australian and New Zealand scholars to consider the relationship between family history and the discipline of history, and the potential of family history to extend the scope of historical inquiry, even to revitalise the discipline. In Anglo-Western culture, the roots of the discipline’s professionalisation lay in efforts to reconstruct history as objective knowledge, to extend its subject matter and to enlarge the scale of historical enquiry. Family history, almost by definition, is often inescapably personal and localised. How, then, have historians responded to this resurgence of interest in the personal and the local, and how has it influenced the thought and practice of historical enquiry?

Malcolm Allbrook is Research Fellow at the National Centre of Biography, and Managing Editor of the Australian Dictionary of Biography, in the School of History, Australian National University.

Sophie Scott-Brown is a Lecturer in Political Philosophy at the University of East Anglia, UK.