On History
A wide-ranging collection of essays on the subject of history from a legendary historian
The first English translation of Ecrits sur l’histoire—a collection of essays written over a twenty-year period following publication of Braudel’s masterwork, The Mediterranean—On History sets forth Fernand Braudel’s reflections on the intellectual framework of his historical studies. Braudel calls on the historian to penetrate beneath the surface of political events to uncover and measure the forces shaping collective existence. Cycles of production, wages and prices, grids of communication and trade, fluctuations of climate, demographic trends, popular beliefs—all of these phenomena are proper subjects, Braudel argues of the historian’s investigations. It is only through study of the longue durée, Braudel argues, that one can discern structure, the supports and obstacles, the limits man and his experience cannot escape.
236 pages | 5.90 x 8.90 | © 1980
History: Discoveries and Exploration, European History, General History
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Table of Contents
Part 1
Time in History
Part 2
History and the Other
Human Sciences
Part 3
History and the Present Age
Preface vii
The Mediterranean and the
Mediterranean World in the Age
of Philip II: Extract from
the Preface 3
The Situation of History
in 1950 6
History and the Social Sciences:
The Longue Duree 25
Unity and Diversity in
the Human Sciences 55
History and Sociology 64
Toward a Historical
Economics 83
Toward a Serial History: Seville
and the Atlantic, 1504-1650 91
Is There a Geography of
Biological Man? 105
On a Concept of
Social History 120
Demography and the Scope of
the Human Sciences 132
In Bahia, Brazil: The Present
Explains the Past 165
The History of Civilizations: The
Past Explains the Present 177
Index 219