MHI-03:
HISTORIOGRAPHY
Course
Code: MHI-03
Assignment
Code: MHI-03/AST/TMA/2016-17
Total
Marks: 100
Q. 1. What is
objectivity? Discuss the relationship between objectivity and interpretation.
Ans. Objectivity is interpretation
of historical events on the basis of evidence with a purpose to present the
truth without bringing any wishful thinking and propaganda in it.
Objectivity is different from
propaganda, relies on evidence and logic, aims to tell the truth and separates
history and fiction. Objectivity has been the founding principle of historians
in the West since the time of Herodotus. Western historians have referred the
historical records as a real past and real human beings and aim to present the
past as it was. In 19th century when Niebuhr introduced the critical method in
writing of history and Ranke elaborately laid the
foundation of a genuinely
‘objective’ historiography. He distinguished history from literature and
philosophy and tried to rid it of overdose of imagination and metaphysical
speculation. Historians who believed Niebuhr’s ideas emphasized that the
records have the facts and historians need to discover that. In early decade of
20th century, there was strong belief on facts and historians believed that if
facts were known ultimate history could be written. This belief of writing
ultimate history was also asserted by French historians Langlois and Seignobos.
In 20th century, trends like the
Marxist and the Annales schools of historiography also believed that history could
be written scientifically and objectively.
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