1st Edition

The Annales School Critical Assessments in History

Edited By Stuart Clark
    320 Pages
    by Routledge

    Annales is the name given to a major school of Historical enquiry, after the journal Annales d'histoire economique et sociale founded in 1929 by Marc Bloch and Lucien Febvre. This school of historiography has been one of the most celebrated, and yet criticised, of the Twentieth century. It represented a departure from the traditional narrative chronological history and the incorporation of other disciplines, particularly geography and social anthropology.
    This set selects essays on the school, their journal, their self-referentiality and their influence, focusing mainly on debates in a number of academic fields from the last three decades. The central figures of Braudel, Ferro, Febvre, Bloch and Burke are well represented, as well as other exponents such as Gurevich and Wallerstein.
    Volume I: Histories and Overviews
    Volume II: The Annales School and Historical Studies
    Volume III: Fernand Braudel
    Volume IV: Febvre, Bloch and other Annales Historians