Schools of historical thought, methodology debates, and the philosophy of history. Covers the major historiographical traditions (Annales, Marxist, feminist, postcolonial, subaltern, world-systems), their methodological commitments, their contributions and limitations, and the enduring debates about objectivity, narrative, and the nature of historical knowledge. Use when evaluating how different historians approach the same subject, understanding why historical interpretations change over time, or assessing the theoretical framework underlying a historical argument.
Historiography is the study of how history is written. It asks not "What happened?" but "How have historians understood what happened, and why have their understandings changed?" Every historical work embeds theoretical assumptions — about what counts as evidence, which causes matter, whose stories deserve telling, and what history is for. Historiography makes these assumptions visible.
This skill catalogs six major schools of historical thought, examines the methodology debates that animate the discipline, and addresses the philosophy of history — the question of what kind of knowledge historical inquiry produces.
Agent affinity: ibn-khaldun (foundational social-historical theory, proto-sociology), braudel (Annales school, structural history)
Concept IDs: hist-patterns-trends, hist-multiple-perspectives
| # | School | Core commitment | Key figures | Active period |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Rankean (traditional) | "What actually happened" — archival method, political narrative |
| Ranke, Acton |
| 1830s-present |
| 2 | Annales | Total history — longue duree, mentalities, interdisciplinary | Febvre, Bloch, Braudel, Le Roy Ladurie | 1929-present |
| 3 | Marxist | Material conditions, class conflict, modes of production | Marx, Hobsbawm, Thompson, Hill | 1840s-present |
| 4 | Feminist | Gender as analytical category, women's experience, patriarchy | Scott, Kelly-Gadol, Davis | 1960s-present |
| 5 | Postcolonial / Subaltern | Colonial power, knowledge production, non-Western agency | Said, Spivak, Guha, Chakrabarty | 1970s-present |
| 6 | World-systems | Global economic structures, core-periphery dynamics | Wallerstein, Frank, Arrighi | 1970s-present |
Founding principle. Leopold von Ranke (1795-1886) declared that the historian's task was to show the past "wie es eigentlich gewesen" — as it actually was. This meant rigorous archival research, critical evaluation of sources, and the reconstruction of political events and state actions from documentary evidence.
Ranke's legacy is foundational. The practices of archival research and source criticism that he formalized remain the bedrock of all historical work, regardless of school. Every historian who enters an archive and evaluates a document's authenticity is performing Rankean operations.
Founding. Marc Bloch and Lucien Febvre founded the journal Annales d'histoire economique et sociale in 1929, challenging the dominance of political narrative history with a program for "total history" — the study of entire societies across all their dimensions.
| Layer | French term | Time scale | Example |
|---|---|---|---|
| Structures | Longue duree | Centuries to millennia | Mediterranean geography shaping trade routes |
| Cycles | Conjoncture | Decades | Price cycles, demographic expansion/contraction |
| Events | Evenement | Days to years | Battles, treaties, coronations |
The Mediterranean (1949). Braudel's masterwork begins with geography (the physical Mediterranean), moves to social and economic structures (trade routes, empires, religions), and only in the third part reaches the political events of Philip II's reign. The architecture of the book embodies the argument: the deepest forces are the slowest and most enduring.
The Annales school transformed the discipline by expanding what counted as history and by demonstrating the power of interdisciplinary methods. Braudel's temporal framework remains one of the most influential analytical tools in the discipline.
Founding principle. Karl Marx (1818-1883) proposed that the fundamental driver of historical change is the mode of production — the way a society organizes its material life. Class conflict, arising from the relations of production, is the engine of historical transformation.
E. P. Thompson (1924-1993). The Making of the English Working Class (1963) argued that class is not a static category but a historical relationship — it is "made" through shared experience, struggle, and cultural creation. Thompson rescued working-class agency from both condescension ("the enormous condescension of posterity") and structural determinism.
Eric Hobsbawm (1917-2012). His four-volume "Ages" series (The Age of Revolution, The Age of Capital, The Age of Empire, The Age of Extremes) provided a Marxist framework for understanding the modern world from 1789 to 1991. Hobsbawm combined sweeping synthesis with elegant prose.
Christopher Hill (1912-2003). Reinterpreted the English Civil War as a bourgeois revolution — a class conflict between the rising commercial class and the feudal aristocracy, mediated through religious language.
Marxist history permanently expanded the discipline's subject matter to include economic structures, class relations, and the experience of working people. The insight that ideas serve interests — that ideology is not innocent — remains indispensable regardless of whether one accepts the full Marxist framework.
Founding question. Joan Kelly-Gadol asked in 1977: "Did women have a Renaissance?" Her answer — that the same period that expanded possibilities for elite men actually contracted possibilities for women — demonstrated that periodization and progress narratives depended entirely on whose experience was centered.
Recovery phase (1960s-1970s). The initial project was to recover women's history — to find women in the archives and write them into historical narratives from which they had been excluded.
Analytical phase (1980s-1990s). The project expanded from women's history to gender history — using gender as a lens to analyze all historical phenomena, including masculinity, sexuality, and the gendered construction of institutions (the military, the state, the church, the academy).
Intersectional phase (1990s-present). Influenced by Black feminist thought (Crenshaw, hooks, Collins) and queer theory (Butler), feminist history increasingly analyzes how gender intersects with race, class, sexuality, and colonialism.
Feminist history transformed the discipline by demonstrating that the exclusion of half of humanity was not a minor oversight but a fundamental distortion. Gender analysis has revealed new dimensions of every historical topic, from warfare (women's roles in military support, resistance, and suffering) to industrialization (gendered division of labor, domestic ideology) to revolution (women's political mobilization and the gendered limits of revolutionary change).
Founding question. Can the colonized peoples speak for themselves in the historical record, or are they always spoken about through the categories of their colonizers?
British colonial narrative. The "Sepoy Mutiny" — a military revolt by disloyal soldiers, suppressed by legitimate authority. Caused by specific grievances (the greased cartridge controversy) among backward-looking troops resistant to modernization.
Indian nationalist narrative. The "First War of Independence" — a proto-nationalist uprising against foreign domination, foreshadowing the independence movement.
Subaltern critique of both. Neither narrative captures the complexity. The colonial narrative erases Indian agency and treats the revolt as irrational. The nationalist narrative imposes a teleology (leading to 1947 independence) that the participants did not share and homogenizes a diverse set of grievances and actors. A subaltern reading would recover the specific, local motivations of different participating groups — sepoys, peasants, urban artisans, displaced elites — without subordinating them to either a colonial or nationalist master narrative.
Postcolonial history fundamentally challenged the discipline's Eurocentric assumptions and demonstrated that the categories through which history is written are themselves historical products with political implications. The recovery of colonized peoples' agency has enriched historical understanding of every period of colonial and postcolonial history.
Founding principle. Immanuel Wallerstein (1930-2019) argued in The Modern World-System (1974) that the proper unit of historical analysis is not the nation-state but the world-system — a global economic structure that has organized production, trade, and political power since the 16th century.
World-systems theory provided a framework for understanding global inequality as a systemic product rather than a collection of national failures. It connected the wealth of core nations to the poverty of peripheral ones through identifiable mechanisms (unequal exchange, debt, structural adjustment). It also offered a genuinely global analytical framework at a time when most history was still organized nationally.
Can historians be objective? Ranke said yes — let the sources speak. Postmodernists (Hayden White, Keith Jenkins) said no — historians impose narrative structures on the past that are literary rather than empirical. The practical consensus among working historians occupies a middle position: complete objectivity is impossible because all inquiry begins from a perspective, but the discipline's methods (source criticism, peer review, evidential standards) provide meaningful constraints on interpretation that distinguish history from fiction.
Is history best told as narrative or as analysis? Traditional historians privileged narrative — the connected account of events in temporal sequence. Social scientists (the Annales school, cliometricians) privileged analysis — the identification of structures, patterns, and causal relationships. In practice, the best historical work combines both: narrative provides intelligibility and human texture; analysis provides explanatory power.
In the 1980s and 1990s, the "linguistic turn" challenged historians to attend to language — not just as a transparent medium for describing reality but as a system that shapes what can be thought and said. This produced valuable insights (discourse analysis, attention to rhetoric and representation) but also provoked a backlash from historians who feared that reducing everything to language undermined the possibility of historical truth. The discipline has largely moved beyond the sharpest version of this debate, incorporating attention to language without abandoning claims about historical reality.
The Annales school and economic historians embraced quantitative methods — statistical analysis, econometrics, demographic modeling. Cultural historians and microhistorians (Ginzburg, Darnton) responded with qualitative approaches — close reading of individual cases, thick description, attention to meaning and experience. Both approaches have blind spots: quantitative methods sacrifice texture for pattern; qualitative methods sacrifice generalizability for depth.
History is neither science nor fiction. It shares with science the commitment to evidence, testable claims, and self-correction. It shares with literature the use of narrative, the construction of meaning, and the interpretation of human experience. It is a hybrid discipline, and attempts to reduce it to either pole distort its nature.
Historical explanation is typically narrative explanation — showing how a sequence of events, decisions, and structures produced an outcome. This differs from nomological explanation (subsumption under general laws) favored in the natural sciences. Historians rarely discover laws; they reconstruct particular sequences. The debate about whether history should aspire to be more "scientific" (Hempel's covering-law model) or whether narrative explanation is a legitimate form of understanding (Collingwood, Ricoeur) remains unresolved but productive.
History and collective memory are related but distinct. Memory is the way communities remember the past — through monuments, rituals, commemorations, and oral traditions. Memory is selective, emotional, and present-oriented. History is the disciplined study of the past through evidence — critical, systematic, and (ideally) self-aware about its own limitations. The relationship between history and memory is one of the most active areas of contemporary historical thought, particularly around traumatic pasts (the Holocaust, slavery, colonialism, genocide).
| Mistake | Why it fails | Fix |
|---|---|---|
| Treating any school as the "correct" one | Each school illuminates and obscures different aspects | Use schools as analytical tools, not doctrines |
| Ignoring the theoretical framework of a historical work | All historical writing embeds assumptions | Identify the school and assess how it shapes the argument |
| Treating historiographical evolution as progress | Newer is not automatically better | Evaluate each school's contributions and limitations on their merits |
| Conflating the historian's view with historical truth | All historians write from a position | Distinguish evidence from interpretation |
| Dismissing a school for its political associations | Marxist history is not invalidated by Soviet politics | Evaluate scholarly arguments on evidential and analytical grounds |
| Assuming objectivity is impossible, therefore anything goes | Difficulty of objectivity does not eliminate evidential standards | Maintain commitment to evidence while acknowledging perspective |