Teaching Historical Narratives

A Philosophical Inquiry into the Virtues of Historical Interpretation

Jon A Levisohn author

Format:Hardback

Publisher:Bloomsbury Publishing PLC

Published:26th Dec '24

Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back

Teaching Historical Narratives cover

With this book Jon Levisohn argues that current history education is set up in a way that sees students of history at one end of a continuum with the academic experts in the field of history at the other, and where the goal of history education is to help students to think like historians.

Building on a critical engagement with Carl Hempel, Hayden White, and David Carr, as well as contemporary work in virtue epistemology, Levisohn proposes a new theory of historiography which serves as a set of guidelines for the teaching and learning of history. According to the theory, the work of historiography is best characterized as a negotiation among narratives, weaving together received narratives with new information and ideas in order to construct a new narrative. This negotiation happens with a particular orientation towards negative evidence or ‘flexible disconfirmationism’, and is assessed according to the openness, sensitivity, responsibility, creativity, boldness and humility, i.e. the virtues of historical interpretation. The book rethinks the work of history education, offering new ways of thinking about the goals of the teaching of history, namely, in terms of the cultivation of the interpretive virtues.

No history educator has made a more compelling case for the importance of interpretive virtues than Jon Levisohn. Drawing on a wealth of examples, TeachingHistorical Narratives shows that historical interpretation requires openness, sensitivity, courage, and humility on the historian’s part. -- Herman Paul, author of Historians’ Virtues: From Antiquity to the Twenty-First Century, Leiden University, The Netherlands
Inthis fine work Levisohn draws on recent studies in the philosophy of history, emphasizing the role of narrative, in order to advance a theory of the teaching of history. Rich in detail and perceptive in its grasp of the issues, this is a book that will impress teachers and writers of history. -- David Carr, Professor Emeritus, Emory University, USA
Levisohn’s book offers a theory of practice in historical inquiry that is, by re-envisioning the teaching of history, a great boon to both teachers and students alike. The need to negotiate between extant narratives is as pressing today as it ever was, and this challenge is insightfully addressed through an account of the exercise of responsibility to historical evidence and other virtues of historical interpretation. -- Guy Axtell, Professor of Philosophy, Radford University, USA

ISBN: 9781350433397

Dimensions: unknown

Weight: unknown

240 pages