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Preface

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  22 March 2023

Robin Headlam Wells
Affiliation:
University of Surrey, Roehampton
Glenn Burgess
Affiliation:
University of Hull
Rowland Wymer
Affiliation:
University of Hull
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Summary

Marc Bloch, co-founder of the Annales d’histoire économique et sociale, once wrote: ‘Misunderstanding of the present is the inevitable consequence of ignorance of the past.’ There is a widespread assumption among New Historicists and Cultural Materialists that older forms of historical thinking, at least in literature departments, were naive and unsophisticated, and that it took ‘the clarity of focus provided by the new critical paradigms of our own day’, as one recent critic puts it, to make us aware of the problems involved in reconstructing the past. In our Introduction we trace the history of historicism in the first half of the twentieth century. We show that historicist thinking, in literature as well as history departments, was a good deal more subtle than New Historicists and Cultural Materialists have been generally willing to acknowledge. While accepting some of the recent postmodern critique of traditional historical empiricism, we argue that there are rational criteria for adjudicating between rival historical narratives and interpretations. We also claim that, while literary scholars and historians may share a common methodology, there is a role for literary criticism which goes beyond historical reconstruction and which includes a continuing responsibility for making aesthetic, moral, and political judgments. Finally, we argue that, in the light of the current wealth of neo-Darwinian studies of all political complexions, it is time to reconsider the anti-essentialism that has become a sine qua non of much New Historicist and Cultural Materialist scholarship.

To signal our recognition of the importance both of the historicist tradition and of recent work in postmodern historiography, we have chosen the term ‘neo-historicism’ for our title. Neo-historicism embraces the following principles:

that there is an historical dimension to all valid acts of textual interpretation; that there is no unifying principle (such as the will of God or the laws of economic determinism) that will explain the course of history; that there will always be multiple histories of any age, reflecting the complexity of the past (though this does not mean that there are no rational grounds for preferring one narrative over another); that while the questions we ask about the past are inevitably driven by present needs and concerns, a sense of historical perspective is best achieved, not by recruiting past thinkers as precursive spokesmen and women of modern values, but by recognising the otherness of the past.

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Chapter
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Neo-Historicism
Studies in Renaissance Literature, History and Politics
, pp. xi - xii
Publisher: Boydell & Brewer
Print publication year: 2000

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