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041 _afre
042 _adc
100 1 0 _aEscudier, Alexandre
_eauthor
245 0 0 _aFrom Chladenius to Droysen
260 _c2003.
500 _a31
520 _aThe last thirty years have witnessed a renaissance of interest in Enlightenment-era German historiography ( Aufklärungshistorie), previously condemned to obscurity by the nineteenth-century refounders of historical studies wishing to justify their own project. This article provides an overview of the context and the main issues of this historiographical revival, emphasizing the importance of the theorization of history—as a process as well as a discipline—at that time. It then retraces the major epistemological themes that developed between 1750 and 1820, followed by those of the era of “historism.” A clear theoretical distinction can be made between Rankean epistemology, known as classical historism, and the crucial turning point marked by Droysen’s Historik (1857). Finally, the article emphasizes the distinction between the standard definition of historism as a specific theoretical constellation (with its declared empiricism, theoretical objectivism, and theologized idealism) and the question of what Ernst Troeltsch called the “crisis of historism” in the modern era. In doing so, it argues for an integrated history of historiography, with the theoretical horizon of a combined socio-cultural history of modern sensitivity to historical relativism. This “history of history” would therefore go beyond the traditional history of science and eventually evolve into a historical anthropology of historicity.
786 0 _nAnnales. Histoire, Sciences Sociales | 58th Year | 4 | 2003-07-01 | p. 743-777 | 2268-3763
856 4 1 _uhttps://shs.cairn.info/journal-annales-2003-4-page-743?lang=en
999 _c139408
_d139408