940 TRA Transnational Challenges to National History Writing / European Science Foundation ; ed.: M. Middell, L. Roura. - Basingstoke ; New York : Palgrave Macmillan, 2013. - 533 p. - (Writing the Nation Series). - Bibliography : p. 444 - 516. - ISBN 978-0-230-50007-5. - Текст : непосредственный. Index : p. 517 - 533
Middell, Matthias. The Various Forms of Transcending the Horizon of National History Writing / M. Middell, L. Roura Espagne, Michel. Comparison and Transfer : a Question of Method / M. Espagne Middell, Matthias. The Writing of World History in Europe from the Middle of the Nineteenth Century to the Present : Conceptual Renewal and Challenge to National Histories / M. Middell, K. Naumann Eckert, Andreas. Area Studies and the Writing of Non-European History in Europe / A. Eckert Friedrichs, Anne. Imperial History / A. Friedrichs, M. Mesenholler Roura, Lluis. Colonization, Decolonization, and Imperial Historiography in the Iberian Peninsula / L. Roura Aust, Martin. A la Recherche d'Histoire Imperiale : Histories of Russia from the Nineteenth to the Early Twenty-First Century / M. Aust Mishkova, Diana. Regional History as a "Challenge" to National Frameworks of Historiography : the Case of Central, Southeast, and Northern Europe / D. Mishkova, B. Strath, B. Trencsenyi Liakos, Antonis. The Canon of European History and the Conceptual Framework of National Historiographies / A. Liakos Martin, Jean-Clement. The French Revolution and Its Historiographies / J. -C. Martin Tortarolo, Edoardo. Historians in the Storm : Émigré Historiography in the Twentieth Century / E. Tortarolo Ginderachter, Maarten Van. How Regional, National, and Transnational History Has (Not) Been Written in Belgium : Reflections within a European Perspective / M. Van Ginderachter, G. Warland Middell, Matthias. A New Challenge to the Writing of History in Europe at the End of the Twentieth Century? / M. Middell, K. Naumann
A five-year-long cooperation between historians from all over Europe, this collection offers the first in-depth analysis of the various ways to write and to conceptualize history beyond the nation-state-container. Examples discussed range from world and global history to regional, imperial, and European frames for the understanding of history. Authors combine comparative approaches with those analyzing entanglements between the historiographies in various European countries.The volume argues that there is a prehistory to the current interest in transnational history, that is, a longer tradition of the transnationalization of historical culture and historical science. It seeks to substantiate the claim that history writing reflected the globality of its time as much as it followed the nationalization of the societies in which it was produced