The Big Story that Defines Historiography

by Apr 9, 2016Worldview

shannonThe following quotes come from Ken Myers’ recent Mars Hill Audio Journal interview of Christopher Shannon, author of The Past as Pligrimagebelieve they are quotations from Shannon’s book, but Myers was a little ambiguous and I was unable to confirm this (Google Books and Amazon had no previews, and I’ve got a limited book budget!):

Historians tell stories about the past, and American historians tend to tell a monolithic American story. The conventional story they tell is one of the inevitability of human progress and liberation through the triumph of reason, the elimination of constraint, and the expansion of the realm of free choice.

This is very similar to what Christian Smith has said about sociology.

Shannon (I believe) also makes this further wise point:

All narrative structures take shape in light of some understanding of the good, and, as stories about the past are told and received, they reinforce certain understandings of the good.

Read More 

Did Evangelical Snowflakes Censor the Bible?

Did Evangelical Snowflakes Censor the Bible?

Salon.com recently published an interview with sociologist Samuel L. Perry titled, “When Evangelical Snowflakes Censor the Bible: The English Standard Version Goes PC.” And I got a reply to all this: Nuh-uh! Let me elaborate that answer, however, because “nuh-uh”...

Review: The Rise and Triumph of the Modern Self

Review: The Rise and Triumph of the Modern Self

The Rise and Triumph of the Modern Self: Cultural Amnesia, Expressive Individualism, and the Road to Sexual Revolution by Carl R. Trueman.My rating: 5 of 5 stars I'm hoping to publish in a journal a more extensive review of this excellent—though long and at times...

Leave a comment.

0 Comments