The Killing of History: How Literary Critics and Social Theorists are Murdering Our PastA huge success in hardcover, The Killing of History argues that history today is in the clutches of literary and social theorists who have little respect for or training in the discipline. He believes that they deny the existence of truth and substitute radically chic theorizing for real knowledge about the past. The result is revolutionary and unprecedented: contemporary historians are increasingly obscuring the facts on which truth about the past is built. In The Killing of History, Windschuttle offers a devastating expose of these developments. This fascinating narrative leads us into a series of case histories that demonstrate how radical theory has attempted to replace the learning of traditional history with its own political agenda. |
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Page 41
... stone aqueduct two metres wide and two metres deep . At its political and cultural centre , the buildings were all made of stone and the great pyramids of its religion tow- ered sixty metres into the air , higher than the cathedral at ...
... stone aqueduct two metres wide and two metres deep . At its political and cultural centre , the buildings were all made of stone and the great pyramids of its religion tow- ered sixty metres into the air , higher than the cathedral at ...
Page 55
... stone implements . Clendinnen says that , because of the Aztec predilection for taking captives rather than killing opponents , their arrows and darts were not meant to kill but to weaken and draw blood . But the fact remains that this ...
... stone implements . Clendinnen says that , because of the Aztec predilection for taking captives rather than killing opponents , their arrows and darts were not meant to kill but to weaken and draw blood . But the fact remains that this ...
Page 66
... killing stone , and was held down by five priests . Four would hold the limbs and one the head . The angle of the plane of the stone meant that the victim's chest cavity was arched and elevated . The execu- tioner priest then plunged a ...
... killing stone , and was held down by five priests . Four would hold the limbs and one the head . The angle of the plane of the stone meant that the victim's chest cavity was arched and elevated . The execu- tioner priest then plunged a ...
Contents
PARIS LABELS AND DESIGNER CONCEPTS The Ascension of Cultural Studies and the Deluge of Social Theory | 1 |
THE OMNIPOTENCE OF SIGNS Semiotics and the Conquest of America | 39 |
BAD LANGUAGE AND THEATRICAL GESTURES Structuralism and Ethnohistory in the Pacific | 71 |
Copyright | |
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Aboriginal academic American Anthony Giddens argues argument Australian Aztecs believe Bligh's Bad Language Botany Bay Certeau Chapter claims Clendinnen Clive concept Cook Cook's Cortés critique cultural studies David Stove debate Dening's Derrida discipline discourse eighteenth century empirical end of history English European evidence fact Flinders Francis Fukuyama French Fukuyama Greg Dening Hawaiian Hayden White Hegel Heidegger Hence historians human ideas imperial induction Inga Clendinnen intellectual interpretation islands killed kind knowledge Kuhn Lakatos literary critics logic London Lono Makahiki Marshall Sahlins Marxist means Mexica Michel Foucault modern narrative native Nietzsche Obeyesekere observation past Paul Carter perspective philosophy political Popper postmodernism postmodernist poststructuralism poststructuralist radical recognised relativism ritual Road to Botany Sahlins's says Schama scientific social sciences society Spanish spatial structuralist structure Tahitian Tenochtitlan texts theorists theory thesis things Thomas Kuhn tion Todorov traditional truth Tzvetan Todorov University warriors Western White writing
References to this book
Trusting Records: Legal, Historical and Diplomatic Perspectives H. MacNeil No preview available - 2000 |