Historians Imagine
Celebrating Creativity in the Craft
Historians Imagine听is a monthly webinar devoted to this dimension of the craft.听 Patty Limerick and Matthew Jacobson talk with path-breaking historians about the inventiveness and vision of their work, and about the more mysterious aspects of their practices鈥攖heir imaginative spark and the virtues that lie听beyond rigor听and out of reach of your typical 鈥渉ow to鈥 manual. These conversations will appeal to professional historians, to be sure, and might offer liberation from the academy鈥檚 constraints and the disciplining demands of convention. But they will equally engage anyone who is interested in how new stories are made from old materials, and how great storytellers and historical sleuths think to do what they do.
Writing history is like jazz improvisation. Good history is made of intuitive flourishes and counterintuitive riffs; it is a call and response, the soloist plays both with and against the ensemble of fellow historians; it hews to established principles, but reaches ever toward the original and unfamiliar. If the presentation of history is an inherently creative venture, then why is it so often mischaracterized as a tedious, dry pursuit? And why in their teaching do history professors themselves typically stress rigor over creativity, aptitude over artistry? The academy鈥檚 many rules do engender integrity. Historians听should听be judicious in the questions they ask of the past; they听should听search out reliable sources and mine them with skepticism and care; they听should听fashion their blueprints according to the best evidence; they听should听credit their predecessors, never claiming a reinvented wheel as their own. But there is still plenty of running room for that spectacular human capacity called 鈥渃reativity.鈥 And indeed, the most highly regarded and compelling practitioners of the craft are those who are able to weave a vivid tapestry with words, to execute the unexpected interpretive bank shot, to render alchemic gold from the unpromising dross recovered from a meager archive. Creativity isn鈥檛 an add-on; our best work depends on it.
Faculty Director and Chair of the Board, Center of the American West, 麻豆影院
William Robertson Coe Professor of American Studies and History, Yale University
To see all of the videos from the Historian Imagine events,
visit our 听page.