Title: What is French social history?
1What is French social history?
2Contact details
- Email C.J.Pearson_at_warwick.ac.uk
- Phone x23398
- Office 329 Humanities building
- Office hours Tuesdays 2-3pm, Thursdays 11am-12pm
3Some housekeeping...
- Seminar group 1 meet in H3.55 not H305
- 1 volunteer each from seminar groups 1 and 2 to
move to group 3 (12-1pm)
4Module handbook
- www2.warwick.ac.uk/fac/arts/history/undergraduate
/modules/hi104/
5Lectures
- Tuesdays 4pm-5pm, R1.03
- Weekly, except reading weeks (week 6)
- Please switch off mobile phones!
6Seminars
- You must read the core readings and come prepared
to discuss them in the seminars - Student presentations most weeks
- Aim to make at least one contribution every week
7Reading
- Reading lists for all weeks on the module
handbook - You must read all the core readings each week
- Core readings are available as either ejournal
articles, ebooks, or scanned extracts - Try to read at least one other item from the
further reading section
8Books you may want to buy...
- Roger McGraw, France 1800-1914 A Social History
- Robert Gildea, Children of the Revolution The
French, 1799-1914
9Assessment
- First Year Students and Part-time Level 1
Students - Three 2,000 word essays (best two contribute 50
of final mark) and one 4,500 word paper (which
makes up the other 50 of your final mark).
10Second Year Students and Honours Level part-time
Students
- Three non-assessed 2,000 word formative essays
and - EITHER 1 three-hour (three question) exam OR
1 two-hour (two question) exam and one 4,500 word
assessed essay. - Although the short essays are non-assessed, they
are required for completion of the course.
11Deadlines!
- Short Essay 1 Monday, Term 1, Week 7
- Short Essay 2 Monday, Term 2, Week 2
- Short Essay 3 Monday, Term 2 Week 7
- Long assessed essay please refer to History
department website - Exams will be held in summer term
12 13G.M. Trevelyan (1942) on social history the
history of a people with the politics left out
14(No Transcript)
15King Louis-Philippe He was gossiping, fussy,
undignified, and with is pear-shaped face a gift
to caricaturists - Cobban
16Lucien Febvre (1878-1956)
17Marc Bloch (1886-1944)
18The Annales approach
- The history of civilisation
- Total history climate, geography, birth an death
rates, demography, economic cycles - Mentalités deep-seated beliefs
- Close links with social sciences sociology and
geography
19Structural history
- Braudel on the geographical structures of
society all change is slow, a history of
constant repetition, ever-recurring cycles - The Mediterranean and the Mediterranean World in
the Age of Philip II
20Ernest Labrousse the real founding father of
French social history (according to Antoine
Prost)
21Labrousse
- Like the Annales, interested in demographic and
economic structures. - but he placed class consciousness and class
struggle as the motor of history
(Communist/Marxist history)
22French social history in its golden age
(according to Prost)
- Quantitative systemic analysis of hard data,
such as tax records, to determine characteristics
of the social group under study - Sedate long-term evolutions and patterns rather
then short term changes - Total or global history all-encompassing
approach to the past links economic, social,
and political history
23- The working class did not rise like the sun at
an appointed time. It was present in its own
making -
- The Making of the English Working Classes (1963)
24Social history beyond class
- History from below the experience of marginal
groups - The importance of political, religious, regional,
professional divisions within classes (Zeldins
History of France 1848-1945) - Newer Annales influenced history greater focus
on mentalités - Impact of womens history
25Postmodernisms challenge to social history
- Postmodernism complex range of theories that
critique the modernist project - Emerged 1970s onwards
- Associated with figures such as Michel Foucault
and Jacques Derrida
26Postmodernist critique of history
- History is not an objective depiction of past
realities. Instead it is a form of narrative or
fiction - Society is not an objective reality. Instead,
it is a cultural and linguistic construct created
by state officials and experts, as part of the
modernization process
27Il ny a pas de hors-texte (there is nothing
outside the text) - Jacques Derrida
28Class reality or construct?
- For postmodernists, class is not a given or the
inevitable result of economic conditions (as
Marxists would have it) - Instead, class is a cultural construct created to
serve political and ideological ends - In other words, political and ideological
discourse creates class, rather than other way
round.
29Cultural history
- Influenced by postmodernism and anthropology
- Interest in representations, meanings, and
identities - It emphasises what people make of the world,
that is to say the construction of meaning,
rather than the world itself (Jordanova, History
in Practice, p.73) - Jacques Rancières La nuit des prolétaires (1981)
30- For Labroussian history, social groups were
given before any historical investigation and
they were defined from outside. When one takes
into account the culture of these groups, their
definition appears to result from an historical
process of self-representation. Groups are not
given they are constructed by their members. - Prost, What has happened to French Social
History? p. 678
31- The most effective social history is that
which manages to explain the way people responded
to the world around them by using the benefits of
a longer-term perspective, but without ever
losing sight of the fact that the past was the
present to those who lived within it - Peter MacPhee, A Social History of France,
1789-1914