History
- For the medical background of a patient, see Anamnesis.
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Historians use many types of sources, including written or printed records, interviews (oral history), and archaeology. Different approaches may be more common in some periods than others, and the study of history has its fads and fashions (see historiography). The events that occurred prior to human records are known as prehistory.
Knowledge of history is often said to encompass both knowledge of past events and historical thinking skills.
A criticism of history as a field has been that it has too narrowly focused on political events or on individuals. Deeper and more significant changes in terms of ideas, technology, family life and culture have received too little attention. Recent developments in history have sought to redress this.
It should be noted that the term 'History' is not used to represent the entire history of our species, but events that have occurred since the agricultural revolution and the appearance of civilizations, the past 10,000 years or so. Events that occur before this time are lumped together under the term prehistory (which covers more than 99% of our species' time on this planet), despite no change in the genetic make up of pre and post-historic humans.
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Classifications
Main article: Historical classification
A very large amount of historical information is available, and several different ways of classifying it are given at the main article.
By ideological classification (historiography)
Although there is arguably some intrinsic bias in history studies (with national bias perhaps being the most significant), history can also be studied from narrow ideological perspectives, which practitioners feel are often ignored, such as:
- Marxist historiography
- Feminist history (also called herstory).
A form of historical speculation known commonly as virtual history, or "counterfactual history", has also been adopted by some historians as a means of assessing and exploring the possible outcomes if certain events had not occurred or had occurred in a different way. This is somewhat similar to the alternative history genre in fiction.
Lists of false or dubious historical resources and historical myths that were once popular and widespread, or have becomes so, have also been prepared.
See also
- Archaeology
- Archontology
- Contemporaneous corroboration
- Evolution of Homo sapiens
- Human evolution
- Social Change
- Historian
- List of historians
- List of historians by area of study
- List of historic travellers
- Futurology
- Prosopography
- Pseudohistory for more about uncritical history
- Psychohistory
- History painter
- Changelog, log or record of changes made to a project, such as a website or software project
External links
- A history resource for kids -Chronology of Events in History, Mythology, and Folklore.
- Talk History Forum – Discussing the past.
- "Timelines of History" – A collection of timelines organized by time, location and subject matter
- Internet History Sourcebooks Project See also Internet History Sourcebooks Project. Collections of public domain and copy-permitted historical texts presented cleanly (without advertising or excessive layout) for educational use.
- World History Blog – Blog that features different aspects of world history.
- History Forum Simaqianstudio – Online community for discussing world history
- History Article from the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
- History of Nations – Offers a history of every nation in the world.
- World History Web Resources: An Annotated Guide – Librarian Michael Lorenzen gives advice on history searching on the Web.
- The Academy – A new discussion forum covering History and other humanities.
Categories: History | Academic disciplines | School subjects