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Carolingian History and the Historians’ Metanarrative. / Старостин, Дмитрий Николаевич.

в: Historia da Historiografia, Том 11, № 26, 01.01.2018, стр. 40-68.

Результаты исследований: Научные публикации в периодических изданияхОбзорная статьяРецензирование

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Старостин, Дмитрий Николаевич. / Carolingian History and the Historians’ Metanarrative. в: Historia da Historiografia. 2018 ; Том 11, № 26. стр. 40-68.

BibTeX

@article{e3e7a546958a42d2ac59ab795a01d820,
title = "Carolingian History and the Historians{\textquoteright} Metanarrative",
abstract = "The essence of historian's craft or his or her ability to construct narratives where only bits of information had reached him or her by way of written or oral tradition is one of the main problems of investigation in the discipline of history. Historians of the Carolingian age present a particularly difficult task for researchers because their work joined in one narrative both their own attitudes and judgments and the attempts to construct a pro-Carolingian, universal and thus non-partisan historical outlook. Looking to the past, Carolingian historians balanced on the verge between providing a contemporary account of recent events, the narrative being shaped in favor of ruling kings, their patrons, and the need to look deeper into the past in search of forces that underlay the Carolingian success. The historical picture we use today was constructed by contemporary historians and it could not have been produced by relying only on documents. It was not a “fabrication” in the negative sense of the term, but a “construction” in the positive meaning. Thus, key episodes of Charlemagne's reign could not be understood without the Carolingian historians' “authorial license”. Only the historical narrative construed a meaningful sequence of events that could be reproduced in memory. But at the same time, once we approach these key events, we are left with historians' interpretations rather than facts. Thus, the Carolingian period in the history of the Frankish kingdom, and particularly the reign of Charlemagne, can be seen as a constructed narrative, which cannot be perceived without looking at the context of its origin and the authors' “creative” influence on the representation of the past.",
keywords = "Historiography, Carolingian empire, Middle Ages, Constructivism, Contingency, Historical culture",
author = "Старостин, {Дмитрий Николаевич}",
year = "2018",
month = jan,
day = "1",
doi = "10.15848/hh.v0i26.1112",
language = "English",
volume = "11",
pages = "40--68",
journal = "Historia da Historiografia",
issn = "1983-9928",
publisher = "Universidade Federal do Rio de Janeiro ",
number = "26",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Carolingian History and the Historians’ Metanarrative

AU - Старостин, Дмитрий Николаевич

PY - 2018/1/1

Y1 - 2018/1/1

N2 - The essence of historian's craft or his or her ability to construct narratives where only bits of information had reached him or her by way of written or oral tradition is one of the main problems of investigation in the discipline of history. Historians of the Carolingian age present a particularly difficult task for researchers because their work joined in one narrative both their own attitudes and judgments and the attempts to construct a pro-Carolingian, universal and thus non-partisan historical outlook. Looking to the past, Carolingian historians balanced on the verge between providing a contemporary account of recent events, the narrative being shaped in favor of ruling kings, their patrons, and the need to look deeper into the past in search of forces that underlay the Carolingian success. The historical picture we use today was constructed by contemporary historians and it could not have been produced by relying only on documents. It was not a “fabrication” in the negative sense of the term, but a “construction” in the positive meaning. Thus, key episodes of Charlemagne's reign could not be understood without the Carolingian historians' “authorial license”. Only the historical narrative construed a meaningful sequence of events that could be reproduced in memory. But at the same time, once we approach these key events, we are left with historians' interpretations rather than facts. Thus, the Carolingian period in the history of the Frankish kingdom, and particularly the reign of Charlemagne, can be seen as a constructed narrative, which cannot be perceived without looking at the context of its origin and the authors' “creative” influence on the representation of the past.

AB - The essence of historian's craft or his or her ability to construct narratives where only bits of information had reached him or her by way of written or oral tradition is one of the main problems of investigation in the discipline of history. Historians of the Carolingian age present a particularly difficult task for researchers because their work joined in one narrative both their own attitudes and judgments and the attempts to construct a pro-Carolingian, universal and thus non-partisan historical outlook. Looking to the past, Carolingian historians balanced on the verge between providing a contemporary account of recent events, the narrative being shaped in favor of ruling kings, their patrons, and the need to look deeper into the past in search of forces that underlay the Carolingian success. The historical picture we use today was constructed by contemporary historians and it could not have been produced by relying only on documents. It was not a “fabrication” in the negative sense of the term, but a “construction” in the positive meaning. Thus, key episodes of Charlemagne's reign could not be understood without the Carolingian historians' “authorial license”. Only the historical narrative construed a meaningful sequence of events that could be reproduced in memory. But at the same time, once we approach these key events, we are left with historians' interpretations rather than facts. Thus, the Carolingian period in the history of the Frankish kingdom, and particularly the reign of Charlemagne, can be seen as a constructed narrative, which cannot be perceived without looking at the context of its origin and the authors' “creative” influence on the representation of the past.

KW - Historiography

KW - Carolingian empire

KW - Middle Ages

KW - Constructivism

KW - Contingency

KW - Historical culture

UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85047780483&partnerID=8YFLogxK

U2 - 10.15848/hh.v0i26.1112

DO - 10.15848/hh.v0i26.1112

M3 - Review article

VL - 11

SP - 40

EP - 68

JO - Historia da Historiografia

JF - Historia da Historiografia

SN - 1983-9928

IS - 26

ER -

ID: 32824815