Frank Ankersmit's Lost Historical Cause

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A01=Peter Icke
Absent Past
Amorphous Chaos
Ankersmit philosophical trajectory analysis
Ankersmit's Argument
Authenticity
Author_Peter Icke
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Category=NHA
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Colligatory Concepts
Eelco Runia
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experience in historiography
Experimental Garden
Frank Ankersmit
Groningen School
Hayden White
historical epistemology
Historical Experience
Historical Studies
Historical Sublime
Historical Theorist
Historical Thought
historiographical analysis
Historiography
Hybrid Creature
Individuating Statements
Kant's Transcendental Analysis
Kantian Transcendentalism
Kant’s Transcendental Analysis
linguistic turn critique
Memory
Memory Studies
Narrative Form
Narrative Logic
Narrative Substance
narrativist theory
Nineteenth Century Disciplinisation
Nostalgia
Old Fi Eld
Old Field
philosophy of history
Semantics
Subjective Historical Experience
Sublime Historical Experience
Testimony
Theory of History
Translation Rules
Universal Writing

Product details

  • ISBN 9780415808033
  • Weight: 540g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 15 Nov 2011
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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The contemporary Dutch historical theorist/philosopher Frank Ankersmit, an erstwhile advocate and promulgator of what has become known as "the linguistic turn" in historical theory, is very well known within the discipline. His early position with regard to the historical text is frequently discussed and evaluated today, and his writings on the subject are often cited. However, this former narrativist position, so robustly and effectively defended by Ankersmit in the past, has been progressively marginalized by Ankersmit himself as his current and radically different theoretical position, most fully expressed in his recent publication Sublime Historical Experience, now (for him) takes precedence. Yet, despite this radical shift in Ankersmit's position, this conspicuous "conversion" of an eminent prime mover in the field of mainstream language centred historical theory, there has been no comprehensive and sustained (investigative) critique of his various works taken in the whole. Consequently, there has until now been no close reading and analytical dissection of that whole, such that Ankersmit's overall trajectory of philosophical thought might be adequately discerned, and perhaps even explained. In short, there is a vacant space here, and the function of this book is, precisely, to fill that space.

Peter P. Icke is a Lecturer in the Department of History, University of Chichester, UK.

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