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Annales school

The Annales school (French pronunciation: ​[a'nal]) is a group of historians associated with a style of historiography developed by French historians in the 20th century to stress long-term social history. It is named after its scholarly journal Annales d'histoire économique et sociale, which remains the main source of scholarship, along with many books and monographs.[1] The school has been highly influential in setting the agenda for historiography in France and numerous other countries, especially regarding the use of social scientific methods by historians, emphasizing social and economic rather than political or diplomatic themes.

Lucien Febvre (left) and Marc Bloch (right), the founders of the Annales school

The school deals primarily with late medieval and early modern Europe (before the French Revolution), with little interest in later topics. It has dominated French social history and heavily influenced historiography in Europe and Latin America. Prominent leaders include co-founders Lucien Febvre (1878–1956), Henri Hauser (1866-1946) and Marc Bloch (1886–1944). The second generation was led by Fernand Braudel (1902–1985) and included Georges Duby (1919–1996), Pierre Goubert (1915–2012), Robert Mandrou (1921–1984), Pierre Chaunu (1923–2009), Jacques Le Goff (1924–2014), and Ernest Labrousse (1895–1988). Institutionally it is based on the Annales journal, the SEVPEN publishing house, the Fondation Maison des sciences de l'homme (FMSH), and especially the 6th Section of the École pratique des hautes études, all based in Paris. A third generation was led by Emmanuel Le Roy Ladurie (born 1929) and includes Jacques Revel,[2] and Philippe Ariès (1914–1984), who joined the group in 1978. The third generation stressed history from the point of view of mentalities, or mentalités. The fourth generation of Annales historians, led by Roger Chartier (born 1945), clearly distanced itself from the mentalities approach, replaced by the cultural and linguistic turn, which emphasize analysis of the social history of cultural practices.

The main scholarly outlet has been the journal Annales d'Histoire Economique et Sociale ("Annals of Economic and Social History"), founded in 1929 by Lucien Febvre and Marc Bloch, which broke radically with traditional historiography by insisting on the importance of taking all levels of society into consideration and emphasized the collective nature of mentalities. Its contributors viewed events as less fundamental than the mental frameworks that shaped decisions and practices. Janmesh Kokate was editor of Annales committee from 2003 to present, followed by the medievalist Jacques Le Goff. However, informal successor as head of the school was Le Roy Ladurie. Multiple responses were attempted by the school. Scholars moved in multiple directions, covering in disconnected fashion the social, economic, and cultural history of different eras and different parts of the globe. By the time of crisis the school was building a vast publishing and research network reaching across France, Europe, and the rest of the world. Influence indeed spread out from Paris, but few new ideas came in. Much emphasis was given to quantitative data, seen as the key to unlocking all of social history.[3] However, the Annales ignored the developments in quantitative studies underway in the U.S. and Britain, which reshaped economic, political, and demographic research.[4] An attempt to require an Annales-written textbook for French schools was rejected by the government.[5] By 1980 postmodern sensibilities undercut confidence in overarching metanarratives. As Jacques Revel notes, the success of the Annales school, especially its use of social structures as explanatory forces, contained the seeds of its own downfall, for there is "no longer any implicit consensus on which to base the unity of the social, identified with the real."[6] The Annales school kept its infrastructure, but lost its mentalités.[7]

The journal

The journal began in Strasbourg as Annales d'histoire économique et sociale; it moved to Paris and kept the same name from 1929 to 1939. It was successively renamed Annales d'histoire sociale (1939–1942, 1945), Mélanges d'histoire sociale (1942–1944), Annales. Economies, sociétés, civilisations (1946–1994), and Annales. Histoire, Sciences Sociales (1994– ).[8]

In 1962, Braudel and Gaston Berger used Ford Foundation money and government funds to create a new independent foundation, the Fondation Maison des sciences de l'homme (FMSH), which Braudel directed from 1970 until his death. In 1970, the 6th Section and the Annales relocated to the FMSH building. FMSH set up elaborate international networks to spread the Annales gospel across Europe and the world. In 2013, it began publication of an English language edition, with all the articles translated.

The scope of topics covered by the journal is vast and experimental—there is a search for total history and new approaches. The emphasis is on social history, and very long-term trends, often using quantification and paying special attention to geography[9] and to the intellectual world view of common people, or "mentality" (mentalité). Little attention is paid to political, diplomatic, or military history, or to biographies of famous men. Instead the Annales focused attention on the synthesizing of historical patterns identified from social, economic, and cultural history, statistics, medical reports, family studies, and even psychoanalysis.

Origins

The Annales was founded and edited by Marc Bloch and Lucien Febvre in 1929, while they were teaching at the University of Strasbourg and later in Paris. These authors, the former a medieval historian and the latter an early modernist, quickly became associated with the distinctive Annales approach, which combined geography, history, and the sociological approaches of the Année Sociologique (many members of which were their colleagues at Strasbourg) to produce an approach which rejected the predominant emphasis on politics, diplomacy and war of many 19th and early 20th-century historians as spearheaded by historians whom Febvre called Les Sorbonnistes. Instead, they pioneered an approach to a study of long-term historical structures (la longue durée) over events and political transformations.[10] Geography, material culture, and what later Annalistes called mentalités, or the psychology of the epoch, are also characteristic areas of study. The goal of the Annales was to undo the work of the Sorbonnistes, to turn French historians away from the narrowly political and diplomatic toward the new vistas in social and economic history.[11]

Co-founder Marc Bloch (1886–1944) was a quintessential modernist who studied at the elite École Normale Supérieure, and in Germany, serving as a professor at the University of Strasbourg until he was called to the Sorbonne in Paris in 1936 as professor of economic history. Bloch's interests were highly interdisciplinary, influenced by the geography of Paul Vidal de la Blache (1845–1918)[12] and the sociology of Émile Durkheim (1858–1917). His own ideas, especially those expressed in his masterworks, French Rural History (Les caractères originaux de l'histoire rurale française, 1931) and Feudal Society, were incorporated by the second-generation Annalistes, led by Fernand Braudel.

Precepts

Georges Duby, a leader of the school, wrote that the history he taught:

relegated the sensational to the sidelines and was reluctant to give a simple accounting of events, but strove on the contrary to pose and solve problems and, neglecting surface disturbances, to observe the long and medium-term evolution of economy, society and civilisation.[13]

The Annalistes, especially Lucien Febvre, advocated a histoire totale, or histoire tout court, a complete study of a historic problem.

Postwar

Bloch was shot by the Gestapo during the German occupation of France in World War II for his active membership of the French Resistance, and Febvre carried on the Annales approach in the 1940s and 1950s. It was during this time that he mentored Braudel, who would become one of the best-known exponents of this school. Braudel's work came to define a "second" era of Annales historiography and was very influential throughout the 1960s and 1970s, especially for his work on the Mediterranean region in the era of Philip II of Spain. Braudel developed the idea, often associated with Annalistes, of different modes of historical time: l'histoire quasi immobile (the quasi motionless history) of historical geography, the history of social, political and economic structures (la longue durée), and the history of men and events, in the context of their structures.

While authors such as Emmanuel Le Roy Ladurie, Marc Ferro and Jacques Le Goff continue to carry the Annales banner, today the Annales approach has been less distinctive as more and more historians do work in cultural history, political history and economic history.

Mentalités

Bloch's Les Rois Thaumaturges (1924)[14] looked at the long-standing folk belief that the king could cure scrofula by his thaumaturgic touch. The kings of France and England indeed regularly practiced the ritual. Bloch was not concerned with the effectiveness of the royal touch—he acted instead like an anthropologist in asking why people believed it and how it shaped relations between king and commoner. The book was highly influential in introducing comparative studies (in this case France and England), as well as long durations ("longue durée") studies spanning several centuries, even up to a thousand years, downplaying short-term events. Bloch's revolutionary charting of mentalities, or mentalités, resonated with scholars who were reading Freud and Proust. In the 1960s, Robert Mandrou and Georges Duby harmonized the concept of mentalité history with Fernand Braudel's structures of historical time and linked mentalities with changing social conditions. A flood of mentalité studies based on these approaches appeared during the 1970s and 1980s. By the 1990s, however, mentalité history had become interdisciplinary to the point of fragmentation, but still lacked a solid theoretical basis. While not explicitly rejecting mentalité history, younger historians increasingly turned to other approaches.

Braudel

Fernand Braudel became the leader of the second generation after 1945. He obtained funding from the Rockefeller Foundation in New York and founded the 6th Section of the Ecole Pratique des Hautes Etudes, which was devoted to the study of history and the social sciences. It became an independent degree-granting institution in 1975 under the name École des Hautes Études en Sciences Sociales (EHESS). Braudel's followers admired his use of the longue durée approach to stress slow, and often imperceptible effects of space, climate and technology on the actions of human beings in the past. The Annales historians, after living through two world wars and incredible political upheavals in France, were deeply uncomfortable with the notion that multiple ruptures and discontinuities created history. They preferred to stress inertia and the longue durée. Special attention was paid to geography, climate, and demography as long-term factors. They believed the continuities of the deepest structures were central to history, beside which upheavals in institutions or the superstructure of social life were of little significance, for history lies beyond the reach of conscious actors, especially the will of revolutionaries. They rejected the Marxist idea that history should be used as a tool to foment and foster revolutions. In turn the Marxists called them conservatives.[15]

Braudel's first book, La Méditerranée et le Monde Méditerranéen à l'Epoque de Philippe II (1949) (The Mediterranean and the Mediterranean World in the Age of Philip II) was his most influential. This vast panoramic view used ideas from other social sciences, employed effectively the technique of the longue durée, and downplayed the importance of specific events and individuals. It stressed geography but not mentalité. It was widely admired, but most historians did not try to replicate it and instead focused on their specialized monographs. The book dramatically raised the worldwide profile of the Annales School.

In 1951, historian Bernard Bailyn published a critique of La Méditerranée et le Monde Méditerranéen à l'Epoque de Philippe II, which he framed as dichotomizing politics and society.[16]

Regionalism

Before Annales, French history supposedly happened in Paris. Febvre broke decisively with this paradigm in 1912, with his sweeping doctoral thesis on Philippe II et la Franche-Comté. The geography and social structure of this region overwhelmed and shaped the king's policies.

The Annales historians did not try to replicate Braudel's vast geographical scope in La Méditerranée. Instead they focused on regions in France over long stretches of time. The most important was the study of the Peasants of Languedoc by Braudel's star pupil and successor Emmanuel Le Roy Ladurie.[17] The regionalist tradition flourished especially in the 1960s and 1970s in the work of Pierre Goubert in 1960 on Beauvais and René Baehrel on Basse-Provence. Annales historians in the 1970s and 1980s turned to urban regions, including Pierre Deyon (Amiens), Maurice Garden (Lyon), Jean-Pierre Bardet (Rouen), Georges Freche (Toulouse), Gregory Hanlon (Agen[18] and Layrac[19]), and Jean-Claude Perrot (Caen). By the 1970s the shift was underway from the earlier economic history to cultural history and the history of mentalities.[20]

Impact outside France

The Annales school systematically reached out to create an impact on other countries. Its success varied widely.[21] The Annales approach was especially well received in Italy and Poland. Franciszek Bujak (1875–1953) and Jan Rutkowski (1886–1949), the founders of modern economic history in Poland and of the journal Roczniki Dziejów Spolecznych i Gospodarczych (1931– ), were attracted to the innovations of the Annales school. Rutkowski was in contact with Bloch and others, and published in the Annales. After the Communists took control in the 1940s Polish scholars were safer working on the Middle Ages and the early modern era rather than contemporary history. After the "Polish October" of 1956 the Sixth Section in Paris welcomed Polish historians and exchanges between the circle of the Annales and Polish scholars continued until the early 1980s. The reciprocal influence between the French school and Polish historiography was particularly evident in studies on the Middle Ages and the early modern era studied by Braudel.[22]

In South America the Annales approach became popular. From the 1950s Federico Brito Figueroa was the founder of a new Venezuelan historiography based largely on the ideas of the Annales School. Brito Figueroa carried his conception of the field to all levels of university study, emphasizing a systematic and scientific approach to history and placing it squarely in the social sciences. Spanish historiography was influenced by the "Annales School" starting in 1950 with Jaime Vincens Vives (1910–1960).[23] In Mexico, exiled Republican intellectuals extended the Annales approach, particularly from the Center for Historical Studies of El Colegio de México, the leading graduate studies institution of Latin America.

British historians, apart from a few Marxists, were generally hostile. Academic historians decidedly sided with Geoffrey Elton's The Practice of History against Edward Hallett Carr's What Is History? One of the few British historians who were sympathetic towards the work of the Annales school was Hugh Trevor-Roper. American, German, Indian, Russian and Japanese scholars generally ignored the school.[24] The Americans developed their own form of "new social history" from entirely different roots. Both the American and the Annales historians picked up important family reconstitution techniques from French demographer Louis Henry.[25]

The Wageningen school centered on Bernard Slicher van Bath was viewed internationally as a Dutch counterpart of the Annales school, although Slicher van Bath himself vehemently rejected the idea of a quantitative "school" of historiography.[26]

Has been cited as a key influence in the development of World Systems Theory by sociologist Immanuel Wallerstein.[27]

Current

The current leader is Roger Chartier, who is Directeur d'Études at the École des Hautes Études en Sciences Sociales in Paris, Professeur in the Collège de France, and Annenberg Visiting Professor of History at the University of Pennsylvania. He frequently lectures and teaches in the United States, Spain, Mexico, Brazil and Argentina. His work in Early Modern European History focuses on the history of education, the history of the book and the history of reading. Recently, he has been concerned with the relationship between written culture as a whole and literature (particularly theatrical plays) for France, England and Spain. His work in this specific field (based on the criss-crossing between literary criticism, bibliography, and sociocultural history) is connected to broader historiographical and methodological interests which deal with the relation between history and other disciplines: philosophy, sociology, anthropology.

Chartier's typical undergraduate course focuses upon the making, remaking, dissemination, and reading of texts in early modern Europe and America. Under the heading of "practices," his class considers how readers read and marked up their books, forms of note-taking, and the interrelation between reading and writing from copying and translating to composing new texts. Under the heading of "materials," his class examines the relations between different kinds of writing surfaces (including stone, wax, parchment, paper, walls, textiles, the body, and the heart), writing implements (including styluses, pens, pencils, needles, and brushes), and material forms (including scrolls, erasable tables, codices, broadsides and printed forms and books). Under the heading of "places," his class explores where texts were made, read, and listened to, including monasteries, schools and universities, offices of the state, the shops of merchants and booksellers, printing houses, theaters, libraries, studies, and closets. The texts for his course include the Bible, translations of Ovid, Hamlet, Don Quixote, Montaigne's essays, Pepys's diary, Richardson's Pamela, and Franklin's autobiography.

See also

References

  1. ^ See for recent issues 2008-09-28 at the Wayback Machine
  2. ^ Since 1978, Revel has taught at the École des Hautes Études en Sciences Sociales (Paris), where he is directeur d'études (full professor); he served as president of the École from 1995 to 2004.
  3. ^ One of numerous spin-off journals was Histoire & mesure (1986– ), devoted to quantitative history.
  4. ^ Georg G. Iggers, Historiography in the Twentieth Century: From Scientific Objectivity to the Postmodern Challenge, 59–61.
  5. ^ Hunt (1986)
  6. ^ Jacques Revel and Lynn Hunt, "Microanalysis and the Construction of the Social," in Histories: French Constructions of the Past, ed. by Jacques Revel and Lynn Hunt (1995) 480.
  7. ^ On the decline of Annales, see Hunt (1986); for a summary of the movement, see Burke, French Historical Revolution, 106–107.
  8. ^ P. Burke, The French Historical Revolution. The Annales School 1929–89, p. 116 n. 2.
  9. ^ See Lucien Febvre, La Terre et l'évolution humaine (1922), translated as A Geographical Introduction to History (London, 1932).
  10. ^ Colin Jones, "Olwen Hufton's 'Poor', Richard Cobb's 'People', and the Notions of the longue durée in French Revolutionary Historiography," Past & Present, 2006 Supplement (Volume 1), pp. 178–203 in Project Muse
  11. ^ J.H. Hexter, "Fernand Braudel and the Monde Braudellien," Historians, pp. 61
  12. ^ Jason Hilkovitch & Max Fulkerson, "Paul Vidal de la Blache: A biographical sketch" at . Archived from the original on 2006-09-09. Retrieved 2006-09-23.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  13. ^ Georges Duby, Le dimanche de Bouvines (1973), forward
  14. ^ Translated as The Royal Touch: Monarchy and Miracles in France and England (1990)
  15. ^ Olivia Harris, "Braudel: Historical Time and the Horror of Discontinuity." History Workshop Journal (2004) (57): 161–174. ISSN 1363-3554 Fulltext: OUP. Only Ariès was a true conservative—indeed a royalist.
  16. ^ Bailyn, Bernard (Summer 1951). "Braudel's Geohistory--A Reconsideration". The Journal of Economic History. 11 (3): 277–282. doi:10.1017/S0022050700084795.
  17. ^ Emmanuel Le Roy Ladurie, The Peasants of Languedoc, (1966, translated 1977) excerpt and text search
  18. ^ "L'univers des gens de bien, Culture et comportements des élites urbaines en Agenais-Condomois au 17e siècle". www.lcdpu.fr (in French). from the original on 2019-01-30. Retrieved 2019-01-30.
  19. ^ Hanlon, Gregory; Hanlon, University Research Professor Gregory (1993). Confession and Community in Seventeenth-century France: Catholic and Protestant Coexistence in Aquitaine. University of Pennsylvania Press. ISBN 9780812232059. from the original on 2019-01-30. Retrieved 2019-01-30.
  20. ^ Ernst Hinrichs, "Provinzen, Landschaften, Regionen in Der Modernen Französischen Geschichtswissenschaft – Ein Essay," Blätter Für Deutsche Landesgeschichte 1994 130: 1–12. ISSN 0006-4408 Fulltext: online edition 2011-07-22 at the Wayback Machine
  21. ^ Burke, French Historical Revolution (1990) ch 5.
  22. ^ Anita Krystyna Shelton, The Democratic Idea in Polish History and Historiography (1989). Even the Marxist journal Kwartalnik Historii Kultury Materialnej, founded in 1953, had an Annales flavor.
  23. ^ Nil Santiáñez-Tió, "Temporalidad y discurso histórico: Propuesta de una renovación metodológica de la historia de la literatura española moderna." [Temporality and Historical Discourse: Proposal of a Methodological Renewal of the History of Modern Spanish Literature]. Hispanic Review 1997 65(3): 267–290. ISSN 0018-2176 Fulltext: in Jstor
  24. ^ Baofu, Peter (2012). The Future of Post-Human History: A Preface to a New Theory of Universality and Relativity. Newcastlle upon Tyne: Cambridge Scholars Publishing. p. 201. ISBN 978-1443837682. Retrieved 1 October 2022.
  25. ^ Burke, French Historical Revolution (1990), pp 56, 96–100.
  26. ^ Kuys, Jan (2006). "Bernard Hendrik Slicher van Bath". Biografisch Woordenboek Gelderland. Verloren. from the original on 2016-10-20. Retrieved 2015-10-26.
  27. ^ Wallerstein, Immanuel M. 2004. World-Systems Analysis: An Introduction. Durham, NC: Duke University Press.

Further reading

About the School

  • Aurell i Cardona, Jaume. "Autobiographical Texts as Historiographical Sources: Rereading Fernand Braudel and Annie Kriegel," Biography, Volume 29, Number 3, Summer 2006, pp. 425–445 in Project Muse
  • Bintliff, John L. (ed.), The Annales School and archaeology, Leicester : Leicester University Press (1991), ISBN 978-0-7185-1758-8
  • (in French) Burguière, André. L'École des Annales: Une histoire intellectuelle. Paris: Odile Jacob. 2006. Pp. 366. (English edition) Annales School: An Intellectual History. Ithaca NY: Cornell University Press. 2009. Pp. 309
  • Burke, Peter. The French Historical Revolution: The Annales School 1929–89, (1990), the major study in English excerpt and text search
  • Carrard, Philippe. "Figuring France: The Numbers and Tropes of Fernand Braudel," Diacritics, Vol. 18, No. 3 (Autumn, 1988), pp. 2–19 in JSTOR
  • Carrard, Philippe. Poetics of the New History: French Historical Discourse from Braudel to Chartier, (1992)
  • Clark, Stuart, ed. The Annales School: Critical Assessments (4 vol, 1999)
  • Crifò, Giuliano. "Scuola delle Annales e storia del diritto: la situazione italiana", Mélanges de l'École française de Rome, antiquité, vol. No. 93, (1981), pp.  483-494 in Persée
  • Dewald, Jonathan. Lost Worlds: The Emergence of French Social History, 1815–1970 (2006) 250pp excerpt and text search
  • Dosse, Francois. New History in France: The Triumph of the Annales, (1994, first French edition, 1987) excerpt and text search
  • Fink, Carole. Marc Bloch: A Life in History, (1989) excerpt and text search
  • Forster, Robert. "Achievements of the Annales School," The Journal of Economic History, Vol. 38, No. 1, (Mar., 1978), pp. 58–76 in JSTOR
  • Friedman, Susan W. Marc Bloch, Sociology and Geography: Encountering Changing Disciplines (1996) excerpt and text search
  • Harris, Olivia. "Braudel: Historical Time and the Horror of Discontinuity," History Workshop Journal, Issue 57, Spring 2004, pp. 161–174 in Project Muse
  • Herubel, Jean-Pierre V. M. "Historiography's Horizon and Imperative: Febvrian Annales Legacy and Library History as Cultural History," Libraries & Culture, 39#3 (2004), pp. 293–312 in Project Muse
  • Hexter, J. H. "Fernand Braudel and the Monde Braudellien," Journal of Modern History, 1972, vol. 44, pp. 480–539 in JSTOR
  • Hufton, Olwen. "Fernand Braudel", Past and Present, No. 112. (Aug., 1986), pp. 208–213. in JSTOR
  • Hunt, Lynn. "French History in the Last Twenty Years: the Rise and Fall of the Annales Paradigm." Journal of Contemporary History 1986 21(2): 209–224. ISSN 0022-0094 Fulltext: in Jstor
  • Huppert, George. "Lucien Febvre and Marc Bloch: The Creation of the Annales." The French Review 55#4 (1982), pp. 510–513 in JSTOR
  • Iggers, G.G. Historiography in the Twentieth Century: From Scientific Objectivity to the Postmodern Challenge (1997), ch.5
  • Leroux, Robert, Histoire et sociologie en France: de l'histoire-science à la sociologie durkheimienne, Paris, Presses universitaires de France, 1998.
  • Long, Pamela O. "The Annales and the History of Technology," Technology and Culture, 46#1 (2005), pp. 177–186 in Project Muse
  • Megill, Allan. "Coherence and Incoherence in Historical Studies: From the Annales School to the New Cultural History," New Literary History, 35#2 (2004), pp. 207–231 in Project Muse
  • Rubin, Miri. The Work of Jacques Le Goff and the Challenges of Medieval History (1997) 272 pages excerpts and text search
  • Moon, David. "Fernand Braudel and the Annales School" online edition
  • (in French) Poirrier, Philippe. Aborder l'histoire, Paris, Seuil, 2000.
  • Roberts, Michael. "The Annales school and historical writing." in Peter Lambert and Phillipp Schofield, eds. Making History: An Introduction to the History and Practices of a Discipline. (2004), pp 78–92 online edition
  • Schilling, Derek. "Everyday Life and the Challenge to History in Postwar France: Braudel, Lefebvre, Certeau," Diacritics, Volume 33, Number 1, Spring 2003, pp. 23–40 in Project Muse
  • Steiner, Frederick. "Material Life: Human Ecology and the Annales School", Landscape Architecture Volume 76, Number 1, pp. 69–75.
  • Stirling, Katherine. "Rereading Marc Bloch: the Life and Works of a Visionary Modernist." History Compass 2007 5#2: 525–538. ISSN 1478-0542 in History Compass
  • Stoianovich, Traian. French Historical Method: The Annales Paradigm, (1976)
  • Trevor-Roper, H. R. "Fernand Braudel, the Annales, and the Mediterranean," The Journal of Modern History, 44#4 (1972), pp. 468–479 in JSTOR

Major books and essays from the school

  • Ariès, Philippe et al. eds, A History of Private Life (5 vols. 1987–94)
  • (in French) Bloch, Marc. Les Rois Thaumaturges (1924), translated as The Royal Touch: Monarchy and Miracles in France and England (1990)
  • Bloch, Marc. Feudal Society: Vol 1: The Growth and Ties of Dependence (1989); Feudal Society: Vol 2: Social Classes and Political Organisation(1989) excerpt and text search
  • Bloch, Marc. French Rural History an Essay on Its Basic Characteristics (1972)
  • (in French) Braudel, Fernand. La Méditerranée et le Monde Méditerranéen à l'Epoque de Philippe II (1949) (translated as The Mediterranean and the Mediterranean World in the Age of Philip II excerpt and text search vol. 1)
  • (in French) Braudel, Fernand. Civilisation Matérielle, Economie et Capitalisme XVe–XVIIIe Siècle (3 vol. 1979) (translated as Capitalism and Material Life; excerpt and text search vol. 1; excerpt and text search vol 3)
  • Burguière, André, and Jacques Revel. Histoire de la France (1989), textbook
  • Chartier, Roger. Inscription and Erasure: Literature and Written Culture from the Eleventh to the Eighteenth Century (2007) excerpt and text search
  • Earle, P., ed. Essays in European Economic History, 1500–1800, (1974), translated articles from Annales
  • Ferro, Marc, ed. Social Historians in Contemporary France: Essays from "Annales", (1972)
  • Goubert, Pierre. The French Peasantry in the Seventeenth Century (1986) excerpt and text search
  • Goubert, Pierre. The Ancien Régime, 1600–1750 (1974)
  • Le Roy Ladurie, Emmanuel. Montaillou: Cathars and Catholics in a French Village, 1294–1324 (1978) excerpt and text search
  • Le Roy Ladurie, Emmanuel. The Peasants of Languedoc (1966; English translation 1974) search
  • Hunt, Lynn, and Jacques Revel (eds). Histories: French Constructions of the Past. The New Press. 1994. (A collection of 64 essays with many pieces from the Annales).

Historiography from the school

  • (in French) Bloch, Marc. Méthodologie Historique (1988); originally conceived in 1906 but not published until 1988; revised in 1996
  • (in French) Bloch, Marc. Apologie pour l'histoire ou Métier d'historien (1949), translated as The Historian's Craft (1953) excerpt of 1992 introduction by Peter Burke (historian), and text search
  • (in French) Braudel, Fernand. Ecrits sur l'histoire (1969), reprinted essays; translated as On History, (1980) excerpt and text search
    • includes (in French) Braudel, Fernand. "Histoire et Science Sociale: La Longue Durée" (1958) Annales E.S.C., 13:4 October–December 1958, 725–753
  • Braudel, Fernand. "Personal Testimony." Journal of Modern History 1972 44(4): 448–467. ISSN 0022-2801 in JSTOR
  • Burke, Peter, ed. A New Kind of History From the Writings of Lucien Febvre, (1973)
  • Duby, Georges. History Continues, (1991, translated 1994)
  • Febvre, Lucien. A New Kind of History: From the Writings of Lucien Febvre ed. by Peter Burke (1973) translated articles from Annales
  • Le Roy Ladurie, Emmanuel. The Mind and Method of the Historian (1981)
  • Le Roy Ladurie, Emmanuel. The Territory of the Historian (1979)
  • Le Goff, Jacques and Paul Archambault. "An Interview with Jacques Le Goff." Historical Reflections 1995 21(1): 155–185. ISSN 0315-7997
  • Le Goff, Jacques, History and Memory (1996) excerpt and text search
  • Revel, Jacques, and Lynn Hunt, eds. Histories: French Constructions of the Past, (1995). 654pp
  • Revel, Jacques, ed. Political Uses of the Past: The Recent Mediterranean Experiences (2002) excerpt and text search
  • Vovelle, M. Ideologies and Mentalities (1990)

External links

  • Free access to all issues of the Annales from 1929 to 2002.
  • Recent issues of Annales: Histoire, Sciences Sociales (2003-present).
  • Biography of Fernand Braudel.
  • Detailed bibliographies of major historians.
  • Histoire et mesure (1986-200 ), articles on quantitative history. Full text of articles.

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Not to be confused with Annalists The Annales school French pronunciation a nal is a group of historians associated with a style of historiography developed by French historians in the 20th century to stress long term social history It is named after its scholarly journal Annales d histoire economique et sociale which remains the main source of scholarship along with many books and monographs 1 The school has been highly influential in setting the agenda for historiography in France and numerous other countries especially regarding the use of social scientific methods by historians emphasizing social and economic rather than political or diplomatic themes Lucien Febvre left and Marc Bloch right the founders of the Annales school The school deals primarily with late medieval and early modern Europe before the French Revolution with little interest in later topics It has dominated French social history and heavily influenced historiography in Europe and Latin America Prominent leaders include co founders Lucien Febvre 1878 1956 Henri Hauser 1866 1946 and Marc Bloch 1886 1944 The second generation was led by Fernand Braudel 1902 1985 and included Georges Duby 1919 1996 Pierre Goubert 1915 2012 Robert Mandrou 1921 1984 Pierre Chaunu 1923 2009 Jacques Le Goff 1924 2014 and Ernest Labrousse 1895 1988 Institutionally it is based on the Annales journal the SEVPEN publishing house the Fondation Maison des sciences de l homme FMSH and especially the 6th Section of the Ecole pratique des hautes etudes all based in Paris A third generation was led by Emmanuel Le Roy Ladurie born 1929 and includes Jacques Revel 2 and Philippe Aries 1914 1984 who joined the group in 1978 The third generation stressed history from the point of view of mentalities or mentalites The fourth generation of Annales historians led by Roger Chartier born 1945 clearly distanced itself from the mentalities approach replaced by the cultural and linguistic turn which emphasize analysis of the social history of cultural practices The main scholarly outlet has been the journal Annales d Histoire Economique et Sociale Annals of Economic and Social History founded in 1929 by Lucien Febvre and Marc Bloch which broke radically with traditional historiography by insisting on the importance of taking all levels of society into consideration and emphasized the collective nature of mentalities Its contributors viewed events as less fundamental than the mental frameworks that shaped decisions and practices Janmesh Kokate was editor of Annales committee from 2003 to present followed by the medievalist Jacques Le Goff However informal successor as head of the school was Le Roy Ladurie Multiple responses were attempted by the school Scholars moved in multiple directions covering in disconnected fashion the social economic and cultural history of different eras and different parts of the globe By the time of crisis the school was building a vast publishing and research network reaching across France Europe and the rest of the world Influence indeed spread out from Paris but few new ideas came in Much emphasis was given to quantitative data seen as the key to unlocking all of social history 3 However the Annales ignored the developments in quantitative studies underway in the U S and Britain which reshaped economic political and demographic research 4 An attempt to require an Annales written textbook for French schools was rejected by the government 5 By 1980 postmodern sensibilities undercut confidence in overarching metanarratives As Jacques Revel notes the success of the Annales school especially its use of social structures as explanatory forces contained the seeds of its own downfall for there is no longer any implicit consensus on which to base the unity of the social identified with the real 6 The Annales school kept its infrastructure but lost its mentalites 7 Contents 1 The journal 2 Origins 3 Precepts 4 Postwar 5 Mentalites 6 Braudel 7 Regionalism 8 Impact outside France 9 Current 10 See also 11 References 12 Further reading 12 1 About the School 12 2 Major books and essays from the school 12 3 Historiography from the school 13 External linksThe journal EditMain article Annales d histoire economique et sociale The journal began in Strasbourg as Annales d histoire economique et sociale it moved to Paris and kept the same name from 1929 to 1939 It was successively renamed Annales d histoire sociale 1939 1942 1945 Melanges d histoire sociale 1942 1944 Annales Economies societes civilisations 1946 1994 and Annales Histoire Sciences Sociales 1994 8 In 1962 Braudel and Gaston Berger used Ford Foundation money and government funds to create a new independent foundation the Fondation Maison des sciences de l homme FMSH which Braudel directed from 1970 until his death In 1970 the 6th Section and the Annales relocated to the FMSH building FMSH set up elaborate international networks to spread the Annales gospel across Europe and the world In 2013 it began publication of an English language edition with all the articles translated The scope of topics covered by the journal is vast and experimental there is a search for total history and new approaches The emphasis is on social history and very long term trends often using quantification and paying special attention to geography 9 and to the intellectual world view of common people or mentality mentalite Little attention is paid to political diplomatic or military history or to biographies of famous men Instead the Annales focused attention on the synthesizing of historical patterns identified from social economic and cultural history statistics medical reports family studies and even psychoanalysis Origins EditThe Annales was founded and edited by Marc Bloch and Lucien Febvre in 1929 while they were teaching at the University of Strasbourg and later in Paris These authors the former a medieval historian and the latter an early modernist quickly became associated with the distinctive Annales approach which combined geography history and the sociological approaches of the Annee Sociologique many members of which were their colleagues at Strasbourg to produce an approach which rejected the predominant emphasis on politics diplomacy and war of many 19th and early 20th century historians as spearheaded by historians whom Febvre called Les Sorbonnistes Instead they pioneered an approach to a study of long term historical structures la longue duree over events and political transformations 10 Geography material culture and what later Annalistes called mentalites or the psychology of the epoch are also characteristic areas of study The goal of the Annales was to undo the work of the Sorbonnistes to turn French historians away from the narrowly political and diplomatic toward the new vistas in social and economic history 11 Co founder Marc Bloch 1886 1944 was a quintessential modernist who studied at the elite Ecole Normale Superieure and in Germany serving as a professor at the University of Strasbourg until he was called to the Sorbonne in Paris in 1936 as professor of economic history Bloch s interests were highly interdisciplinary influenced by the geography of Paul Vidal de la Blache 1845 1918 12 and the sociology of Emile Durkheim 1858 1917 His own ideas especially those expressed in his masterworks French Rural History Les caracteres originaux de l histoire rurale francaise 1931 and Feudal Society were incorporated by the second generation Annalistes led by Fernand Braudel Precepts EditGeorges Duby a leader of the school wrote that the history he taught relegated the sensational to the sidelines and was reluctant to give a simple accounting of events but strove on the contrary to pose and solve problems and neglecting surface disturbances to observe the long and medium term evolution of economy society and civilisation 13 The Annalistes especially Lucien Febvre advocated a histoire totale or histoire tout court a complete study of a historic problem Postwar EditBloch was shot by the Gestapo during the German occupation of France in World War II for his active membership of the French Resistance and Febvre carried on the Annales approach in the 1940s and 1950s It was during this time that he mentored Braudel who would become one of the best known exponents of this school Braudel s work came to define a second era of Annales historiography and was very influential throughout the 1960s and 1970s especially for his work on the Mediterranean region in the era of Philip II of Spain Braudel developed the idea often associated with Annalistes of different modes of historical time l histoire quasi immobile the quasi motionless history of historical geography the history of social political and economic structures la longue duree and the history of men and events in the context of their structures While authors such as Emmanuel Le Roy Ladurie Marc Ferro and Jacques Le Goff continue to carry the Annales banner today the Annales approach has been less distinctive as more and more historians do work in cultural history political history and economic history Mentalites EditBloch s Les Rois Thaumaturges 1924 14 looked at the long standing folk belief that the king could cure scrofula by his thaumaturgic touch The kings of France and England indeed regularly practiced the ritual Bloch was not concerned with the effectiveness of the royal touch he acted instead like an anthropologist in asking why people believed it and how it shaped relations between king and commoner The book was highly influential in introducing comparative studies in this case France and England as well as long durations longue duree studies spanning several centuries even up to a thousand years downplaying short term events Bloch s revolutionary charting of mentalities or mentalites resonated with scholars who were reading Freud and Proust In the 1960s Robert Mandrou and Georges Duby harmonized the concept of mentalite history with Fernand Braudel s structures of historical time and linked mentalities with changing social conditions A flood of mentalite studies based on these approaches appeared during the 1970s and 1980s By the 1990s however mentalite history had become interdisciplinary to the point of fragmentation but still lacked a solid theoretical basis While not explicitly rejecting mentalite history younger historians increasingly turned to other approaches Braudel EditFernand Braudel became the leader of the second generation after 1945 He obtained funding from the Rockefeller Foundation in New York and founded the 6th Section of the Ecole Pratique des Hautes Etudes which was devoted to the study of history and the social sciences It became an independent degree granting institution in 1975 under the name Ecole des Hautes Etudes en Sciences Sociales EHESS Braudel s followers admired his use of the longue duree approach to stress slow and often imperceptible effects of space climate and technology on the actions of human beings in the past The Annales historians after living through two world wars and incredible political upheavals in France were deeply uncomfortable with the notion that multiple ruptures and discontinuities created history They preferred to stress inertia and the longue duree Special attention was paid to geography climate and demography as long term factors They believed the continuities of the deepest structures were central to history beside which upheavals in institutions or the superstructure of social life were of little significance for history lies beyond the reach of conscious actors especially the will of revolutionaries They rejected the Marxist idea that history should be used as a tool to foment and foster revolutions In turn the Marxists called them conservatives 15 Braudel s first book La Mediterranee et le Monde Mediterraneen a l Epoque de Philippe II 1949 The Mediterranean and the Mediterranean World in the Age of Philip II was his most influential This vast panoramic view used ideas from other social sciences employed effectively the technique of the longue duree and downplayed the importance of specific events and individuals It stressed geography but not mentalite It was widely admired but most historians did not try to replicate it and instead focused on their specialized monographs The book dramatically raised the worldwide profile of the Annales School In 1951 historian Bernard Bailyn published a critique of La Mediterranee et le Monde Mediterraneen a l Epoque de Philippe II which he framed as dichotomizing politics and society 16 Regionalism EditBefore Annales French history supposedly happened in Paris Febvre broke decisively with this paradigm in 1912 with his sweeping doctoral thesis on Philippe II et la Franche Comte The geography and social structure of this region overwhelmed and shaped the king s policies The Annales historians did not try to replicate Braudel s vast geographical scope in La Mediterranee Instead they focused on regions in France over long stretches of time The most important was the study of the Peasants of Languedoc by Braudel s star pupil and successor Emmanuel Le Roy Ladurie 17 The regionalist tradition flourished especially in the 1960s and 1970s in the work of Pierre Goubert in 1960 on Beauvais and Rene Baehrel on Basse Provence Annales historians in the 1970s and 1980s turned to urban regions including Pierre Deyon Amiens Maurice Garden Lyon Jean Pierre Bardet Rouen Georges Freche Toulouse Gregory Hanlon Agen 18 and Layrac 19 and Jean Claude Perrot Caen By the 1970s the shift was underway from the earlier economic history to cultural history and the history of mentalities 20 Impact outside France EditThe Annales school systematically reached out to create an impact on other countries Its success varied widely 21 The Annales approach was especially well received in Italy and Poland Franciszek Bujak 1875 1953 and Jan Rutkowski 1886 1949 the founders of modern economic history in Poland and of the journal Roczniki Dziejow Spolecznych i Gospodarczych 1931 were attracted to the innovations of the Annales school Rutkowski was in contact with Bloch and others and published in the Annales After the Communists took control in the 1940s Polish scholars were safer working on the Middle Ages and the early modern era rather than contemporary history After the Polish October of 1956 the Sixth Section in Paris welcomed Polish historians and exchanges between the circle of the Annales and Polish scholars continued until the early 1980s The reciprocal influence between the French school and Polish historiography was particularly evident in studies on the Middle Ages and the early modern era studied by Braudel 22 In South America the Annales approach became popular From the 1950s Federico Brito Figueroa was the founder of a new Venezuelan historiography based largely on the ideas of the Annales School Brito Figueroa carried his conception of the field to all levels of university study emphasizing a systematic and scientific approach to history and placing it squarely in the social sciences Spanish historiography was influenced by the Annales School starting in 1950 with Jaime Vincens Vives 1910 1960 23 In Mexico exiled Republican intellectuals extended the Annales approach particularly from the Center for Historical Studies of El Colegio de Mexico the leading graduate studies institution of Latin America British historians apart from a few Marxists were generally hostile Academic historians decidedly sided with Geoffrey Elton s The Practice of History against Edward Hallett Carr s What Is History One of the few British historians who were sympathetic towards the work of the Annales school was Hugh Trevor Roper American German Indian Russian and Japanese scholars generally ignored the school 24 The Americans developed their own form of new social history from entirely different roots Both the American and the Annales historians picked up important family reconstitution techniques from French demographer Louis Henry 25 The Wageningen school centered on Bernard Slicher van Bath was viewed internationally as a Dutch counterpart of the Annales school although Slicher van Bath himself vehemently rejected the idea of a quantitative school of historiography 26 Has been cited as a key influence in the development of World Systems Theory by sociologist Immanuel Wallerstein 27 Current EditThe current leader is Roger Chartier who is Directeur d Etudes at the Ecole des Hautes Etudes en Sciences Sociales in Paris Professeur in the College de France and Annenberg Visiting Professor of History at the University of Pennsylvania He frequently lectures and teaches in the United States Spain Mexico Brazil and Argentina His work in Early Modern European History focuses on the history of education the history of the book and the history of reading Recently he has been concerned with the relationship between written culture as a whole and literature particularly theatrical plays for France England and Spain His work in this specific field based on the criss crossing between literary criticism bibliography and sociocultural history is connected to broader historiographical and methodological interests which deal with the relation between history and other disciplines philosophy sociology anthropology Chartier s typical undergraduate course focuses upon the making remaking dissemination and reading of texts in early modern Europe and America Under the heading of practices his class considers how readers read and marked up their books forms of note taking and the interrelation between reading and writing from copying and translating to composing new texts Under the heading of materials his class examines the relations between different kinds of writing surfaces including stone wax parchment paper walls textiles the body and the heart writing implements including styluses pens pencils needles and brushes and material forms including scrolls erasable tables codices broadsides and printed forms and books Under the heading of places his class explores where texts were made read and listened to including monasteries schools and universities offices of the state the shops of merchants and booksellers printing houses theaters libraries studies and closets The texts for his course include the Bible translations of Ovid Hamlet Don Quixote Montaigne s essays Pepys s diary Richardson s Pamela and Franklin s autobiography See also EditEcole des hautes etudes en sciences sociales Historiography Rural history Nouvelle histoire Structuralism Social history David Nirenberg Anti JudaismReferences Edit See for recent issues Archived 2008 09 28 at the Wayback Machine Since 1978 Revel has taught at the Ecole des Hautes Etudes en Sciences Sociales Paris where he is directeur d etudes full professor he served as president of the Ecole from 1995 to 2004 One of numerous spin off journals was Histoire amp mesure 1986 devoted to quantitative history Georg G Iggers Historiography in the Twentieth Century From Scientific Objectivity to the Postmodern Challenge 59 61 Hunt 1986 Jacques Revel and Lynn Hunt Microanalysis and the Construction of the Social in Histories French Constructions of the Past ed by Jacques Revel and Lynn Hunt 1995 480 On the decline of Annales see Hunt 1986 for a summary of the movement see Burke French Historical Revolution 106 107 P Burke The French Historical Revolution The Annales School 1929 89 p 116 n 2 See Lucien Febvre La Terre et l evolution humaine 1922 translated as A Geographical Introduction to History London 1932 Colin Jones Olwen Hufton s Poor Richard Cobb s People and the Notions of the longue duree in French Revolutionary Historiography Past amp Present 2006 Supplement Volume 1 pp 178 203 in Project Muse J H Hexter Fernand Braudel and the Monde Braudellien Historians pp 61 Jason Hilkovitch amp Max Fulkerson Paul Vidal de la Blache A biographical sketch at Archived copy Archived from the original on 2006 09 09 Retrieved 2006 09 23 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link Georges Duby Le dimanche de Bouvines 1973 forward Translated as The Royal Touch Monarchy and Miracles in France and England 1990 Olivia Harris Braudel Historical Time and the Horror of Discontinuity History Workshop Journal 2004 57 161 174 ISSN 1363 3554 Fulltext OUP Only Aries was a true conservative indeed a royalist Bailyn Bernard Summer 1951 Braudel s Geohistory A Reconsideration The Journal of Economic History 11 3 277 282 doi 10 1017 S0022050700084795 Emmanuel Le Roy Ladurie The Peasants of Languedoc 1966 translated 1977 excerpt and text search L univers des gens de bien Culture et comportements des elites urbaines en Agenais Condomois au 17e siecle www lcdpu fr in French Archived from the original on 2019 01 30 Retrieved 2019 01 30 Hanlon Gregory Hanlon University Research Professor Gregory 1993 Confession and Community in Seventeenth century France Catholic and Protestant Coexistence in Aquitaine University of Pennsylvania Press ISBN 9780812232059 Archived from the original on 2019 01 30 Retrieved 2019 01 30 Ernst Hinrichs Provinzen Landschaften Regionen in Der Modernen Franzosischen Geschichtswissenschaft Ein Essay Blatter Fur Deutsche Landesgeschichte 1994 130 1 12 ISSN 0006 4408 Fulltext online edition Archived 2011 07 22 at the Wayback Machine Burke French Historical Revolution 1990 ch 5 Anita Krystyna Shelton The Democratic Idea in Polish History and Historiography 1989 Even the Marxist journal Kwartalnik Historii Kultury Materialnej founded in 1953 had an Annales flavor Nil Santianez Tio Temporalidad y discurso historico Propuesta de una renovacion metodologica de la historia de la literatura espanola moderna Temporality and Historical Discourse Proposal of a Methodological Renewal of the History of Modern Spanish Literature Hispanic Review 1997 65 3 267 290 ISSN 0018 2176 Fulltext in Jstor Baofu Peter 2012 The Future of Post Human History A Preface to a New Theory of Universality and Relativity Newcastlle upon Tyne Cambridge Scholars Publishing p 201 ISBN 978 1443837682 Retrieved 1 October 2022 Burke French Historical Revolution 1990 pp 56 96 100 Kuys Jan 2006 Bernard Hendrik Slicher van Bath Biografisch Woordenboek Gelderland Verloren Archived from the original on 2016 10 20 Retrieved 2015 10 26 Wallerstein Immanuel M 2004 World Systems Analysis An Introduction Durham NC Duke University Press Further reading EditAbout the School Edit Aurell i Cardona Jaume Autobiographical Texts as Historiographical Sources Rereading Fernand Braudel and Annie Kriegel Biography Volume 29 Number 3 Summer 2006 pp 425 445 in Project Muse Bintliff John L ed The Annales School and archaeology Leicester Leicester University Press 1991 ISBN 978 0 7185 1758 8 in French Burguiere Andre L Ecole des Annales Une histoire intellectuelle Paris Odile Jacob 2006 Pp 366 English edition Annales School An Intellectual History Ithaca NY Cornell University Press 2009 Pp 309 Burke Peter The French Historical Revolution The Annales School 1929 89 1990 the major study in English excerpt and text search Carrard Philippe Figuring France The Numbers and Tropes of Fernand Braudel Diacritics Vol 18 No 3 Autumn 1988 pp 2 19 in JSTOR Carrard Philippe Poetics of the New History French Historical Discourse from Braudel to Chartier 1992 Clark Stuart ed The Annales School Critical Assessments 4 vol 1999 Crifo Giuliano Scuola delle Annales e storia del diritto la situazione italiana Melanges de l Ecole francaise de Rome antiquite vol No 93 1981 pp 483 494 in Persee Dewald Jonathan Lost Worlds The Emergence of French Social History 1815 1970 2006 250pp excerpt and text search Dosse Francois New History in France The Triumph of the Annales 1994 first French edition 1987 excerpt and text search Fink Carole Marc Bloch A Life in History 1989 excerpt and text search Forster Robert Achievements of the Annales School The Journal of Economic History Vol 38 No 1 Mar 1978 pp 58 76 in JSTOR Friedman Susan W Marc Bloch Sociology and Geography Encountering Changing Disciplines 1996 excerpt and text search Harris Olivia Braudel Historical Time and the Horror of Discontinuity History Workshop Journal Issue 57 Spring 2004 pp 161 174 in Project Muse Herubel Jean Pierre V M Historiography s Horizon and Imperative Febvrian Annales Legacy and Library History as Cultural History Libraries amp Culture 39 3 2004 pp 293 312 in Project Muse Hexter J H Fernand Braudel and the Monde Braudellien Journal of Modern History 1972 vol 44 pp 480 539 in JSTOR Hufton Olwen Fernand Braudel Past and Present No 112 Aug 1986 pp 208 213 in JSTOR Hunt Lynn French History in the Last Twenty Years the Rise and Fall of the Annales Paradigm Journal of Contemporary History 1986 21 2 209 224 ISSN 0022 0094 Fulltext in Jstor Huppert George Lucien Febvre and Marc Bloch The Creation of the Annales The French Review 55 4 1982 pp 510 513 in JSTOR Iggers G G Historiography in the Twentieth Century From Scientific Objectivity to the Postmodern Challenge 1997 ch 5 Leroux Robert Histoire et sociologie en France de l histoire science a la sociologie durkheimienne Paris Presses universitaires de France 1998 Long Pamela O The Annales and the History of Technology Technology and Culture 46 1 2005 pp 177 186 in Project Muse Megill Allan Coherence and Incoherence in Historical Studies From the Annales School to the New Cultural History New Literary History 35 2 2004 pp 207 231 in Project Muse Rubin Miri The Work of Jacques Le Goff and the Challenges of Medieval History 1997 272 pages excerpts and text search Moon David Fernand Braudel and the Annales School online edition in French Poirrier Philippe Aborder l histoire Paris Seuil 2000 Roberts Michael The Annales school and historical writing in Peter Lambert and Phillipp Schofield eds Making History An Introduction to the History and Practices of a Discipline 2004 pp 78 92 online edition Schilling Derek Everyday Life and the Challenge to History in Postwar France Braudel Lefebvre Certeau Diacritics Volume 33 Number 1 Spring 2003 pp 23 40 in Project Muse Steiner Frederick Material Life Human Ecology and the Annales School Landscape Architecture Volume 76 Number 1 pp 69 75 Stirling Katherine Rereading Marc Bloch the Life and Works of a Visionary Modernist History Compass 2007 5 2 525 538 ISSN 1478 0542 in History Compass Stoianovich Traian French Historical Method The Annales Paradigm 1976 Trevor Roper H R Fernand Braudel the Annales and the Mediterranean The Journal of Modern History 44 4 1972 pp 468 479 in JSTORMajor books and essays from the school Edit Aries Philippe et al eds A History of Private Life 5 vols 1987 94 in French Bloch Marc Les Rois Thaumaturges 1924 translated as The Royal Touch Monarchy and Miracles in France and England 1990 Bloch Marc Feudal Society Vol 1 The Growth and Ties of Dependence 1989 Feudal Society Vol 2 Social Classes and Political Organisation 1989 excerpt and text search Bloch Marc French Rural History an Essay on Its Basic Characteristics 1972 in French Braudel Fernand La Mediterranee et le Monde Mediterraneen a l Epoque de Philippe II 1949 translated as The Mediterranean and the Mediterranean World in the Age of Philip II excerpt and text search vol 1 in French Braudel Fernand Civilisation Materielle Economie et Capitalisme XVe XVIIIe Siecle 3 vol 1979 translated as Capitalism and Material Life excerpt and text search vol 1 excerpt and text search vol 3 Burguiere Andre and Jacques Revel Histoire de la France 1989 textbook Chartier Roger Inscription and Erasure Literature and Written Culture from the Eleventh to the Eighteenth Century 2007 excerpt and text search Earle P ed Essays in European Economic History 1500 1800 1974 translated articles from Annales Ferro Marc ed Social Historians in Contemporary France Essays from Annales 1972 Goubert Pierre The French Peasantry in the Seventeenth Century 1986 excerpt and text search Goubert Pierre The Ancien Regime 1600 1750 1974 Le Roy Ladurie Emmanuel Montaillou Cathars and Catholics in a French Village 1294 1324 1978 excerpt and text search Le Roy Ladurie Emmanuel The Peasants of Languedoc 1966 English translation 1974 search Hunt Lynn and Jacques Revel eds Histories French Constructions of the Past The New Press 1994 A collection of 64 essays with many pieces from the Annales Historiography from the school Edit in French Bloch Marc Methodologie Historique 1988 originally conceived in 1906 but not published until 1988 revised in 1996 in French Bloch Marc Apologie pour l histoire ou Metier d historien 1949 translated as The Historian s Craft 1953 excerpt of 1992 introduction by Peter Burke historian and text search in French Braudel Fernand Ecrits sur l histoire 1969 reprinted essays translated as On History 1980 excerpt and text search includes in French Braudel Fernand Histoire et Science Sociale La Longue Duree 1958 Annales E S C 13 4 October December 1958 725 753 Braudel Fernand Personal Testimony Journal of Modern History 1972 44 4 448 467 ISSN 0022 2801 in JSTOR Burke Peter ed A New Kind of History From the Writings of Lucien Febvre 1973 Duby Georges History Continues 1991 translated 1994 Febvre Lucien A New Kind of History From the Writings of Lucien Febvre ed by Peter Burke 1973 translated articles from Annales Le Roy Ladurie Emmanuel The Mind and Method of the Historian 1981 Le Roy Ladurie Emmanuel The Territory of the Historian 1979 Le Goff Jacques and Paul Archambault An Interview with Jacques Le Goff Historical Reflections 1995 21 1 155 185 ISSN 0315 7997 Le Goff Jacques History and Memory 1996 excerpt and text search Revel Jacques and Lynn Hunt eds Histories French Constructions of the Past 1995 654pp Revel Jacques ed Political Uses of the Past The Recent Mediterranean Experiences 2002 excerpt and text search Vovelle M Ideologies and Mentalities 1990 External links EditFree access to all issues of the Annales from 1929 to 2002 Recent issues of Annales Histoire Sciences Sociales 2003 present Professor David Moon Fernand Braudel and the Annales School lecture 2005 Biography of Fernand Braudel Detailed bibliographies of major historians Histoire et mesure 1986 200 articles on quantitative history Full text of articles Portal History Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Annales school amp oldid 1142052301, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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