This section contains 5,709 words (approx. 15 pages at 400 words per page) |
In the following essay, McNeill discusses how the great range and eclectic nature of A Study of History make uncovering consistent and unified themes in the work difficult.
There are at least three points of view from which the worth of a book of history may be assessed. One may ask whether the book is accurate, that is, whether it deals fairly and skillfully with the data upon which it is based. Secondly, one may turn the historian's characteristic tools back upon himself and ask: How did this book come to be written? What is its relation to the individual life of the author, and more particularly, what is its relation to the age in which he lived? And, thirdly, one may ask what basic ideas, assumptions, or intellectual methods may underlie the text, governing its scope and proportion, shaping its emphasis, and giving a sort of...
This section contains 5,709 words (approx. 15 pages at 400 words per page) |