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7. Concepts of Historical Time and Social History
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Reinhart Koselleck
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Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- Contents vii
- Foreword ix
- Contributors ix
- 1. On the Need for Theory in the Discipline of History 1
- 2. Social History and Conceptual History 20
- 3. Introduction to Hayden White's Tropics of Discourse 38
- 4. Transformations of Experience and Methodological Change: A Historical-Anthropological Essay 45
- 5. The Temporalization of Utopia 84
- 6. Time and History 100
- 7. Concepts of Historical Time and Social History 115
- 8. The Unknown Future and the Art of Prognosis 131
- 9. Remarks on the Revolutionary Calendar and Neue Zeit 148
- 10. The Eighteenth Century as the Beginning of Modernity 154
- 11. On the Anthropological and Semantic Structure of Bildung 170
- 12. Three burgerliche Worlds? Preliminary Theoretical-Historical Remarks on the Comparative Semantics of Civil Society in Germany, England, and France 208
- 13. "Progress" and "Decline": An Appendix to the History of Two Concepts 218
- 14. Some Questions Regarding the Conceptual History of"Crisis" 236
- 15. The Limits of Emancipation: A Conceptual-Historical Sketch 248
- 16. Daumier and Death 265
- 17. War Memorials: Identity Formations of the Survivors 285
- 18. Afterword to Charlotte Beradt's The Third Reich of Dreams 327
- Notes 341
Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- Contents vii
- Foreword ix
- Contributors ix
- 1. On the Need for Theory in the Discipline of History 1
- 2. Social History and Conceptual History 20
- 3. Introduction to Hayden White's Tropics of Discourse 38
- 4. Transformations of Experience and Methodological Change: A Historical-Anthropological Essay 45
- 5. The Temporalization of Utopia 84
- 6. Time and History 100
- 7. Concepts of Historical Time and Social History 115
- 8. The Unknown Future and the Art of Prognosis 131
- 9. Remarks on the Revolutionary Calendar and Neue Zeit 148
- 10. The Eighteenth Century as the Beginning of Modernity 154
- 11. On the Anthropological and Semantic Structure of Bildung 170
- 12. Three burgerliche Worlds? Preliminary Theoretical-Historical Remarks on the Comparative Semantics of Civil Society in Germany, England, and France 208
- 13. "Progress" and "Decline": An Appendix to the History of Two Concepts 218
- 14. Some Questions Regarding the Conceptual History of"Crisis" 236
- 15. The Limits of Emancipation: A Conceptual-Historical Sketch 248
- 16. Daumier and Death 265
- 17. War Memorials: Identity Formations of the Survivors 285
- 18. Afterword to Charlotte Beradt's The Third Reich of Dreams 327
- Notes 341