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Annotated Bibliography, Historiography, and Abstract Help (page 2)

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A Historiography

A historiography is not commonly required but if it is, it usually applies to research papers on historical topics. However, it is an important component of historical research papers and one that you should know about if it is required. A historiography is an overview of all your sources. It comes at the end of the text of your paper (before end notes and bibliography) and is usually written on a separate page. Unlike an annotated bibliography, which is an assessment of each individual book and its particular value to your paper, a historiography analyzes an overview or trend in historical thinking and usually applies to research projects or papers of considerable length. A historiography describes how a particular topic, historical figure, or idea has been viewed and written about over time.

For instance, if you have been researching John F. Kennedy's presidency and you have read dozens of books, you may have noticed that books written during the 1970s viewed President Kennedy and his policies in one way while more current books written in the late 1990s viewed President Kennedy's presidency in a whole different light. Maybe books written during the 1970s focused more upon President Kennedy's economic policies, while books written during the 1990s focused more on the ideology or beliefs of the Kennedy White House during that time and did not focus upon President Kennedy's role as a policy maker.

A historiography, in other words, is an overview of the perspectives, particular slants, and biases of particular sources that you have consulted and want to mention to your reader. Unlike footnotes or a bibliography, it does not need to follow a special citation or style format. It is simply a paragraph, several paragraphs, or a page (length is not set in stone) that summarizes this information while listing particular books by name. For example, your historiography at the end of your paper on President Kennedy might look something like this:

Example:

After reading over fifty titles about President Kennedy's final days in the White House, the most helpful studies were several biographies written during the 1970s. Lisa Jackson's biography, Kennedy's Last Days, was particularly insightful because of the firsthand interviews it related. Joe Thornton's work, Kennedy The Man: I Knew Him Well, was equally helpful. Many of the other biographies published during this time period placed particular emphasis on Kennedy's origins and upbringing as the deciding factor behind his policies. Kennedy's Financial Outlook, by Lorraine Newman, explored how his own economic circumstances and those of his family later influenced his worldview and national economic policies. Other books that were helpful but written from a different perspective were several of the biographies published during the 1990s. These historians and authors differed from their predecessors. They devoted less research to Kennedy's own experiences and personal circumstances and focused directly on the legislation he initiated. A particularly good examination of Kennedy's policies from a political perspective is written by Sue Miller, an authority on the subject and author of several books about Kennedy. Her most recent work, An Examination of Kennedy and Congress, written in the late 1990s, is the definitive examination of his legacy as president.

In essence, unlike your footnotes, citations, and your bibliography, you don't have to mention each and every book you consulted for your historiography. A historiography is your final overview or assessment of all your sources. Highlight those books that you feel were critical while providing your reader with a chronological, historical perspective on the books you consulted and how their overall analyses differed. Again, while this may seem complex, it's usually easy to do because it is just a matter of putting your thoughts down on paper. Since it is written at the very end of your paper after you have accumulated all your sources, done all your research, and written your work, it is a very logical and helpful way to summarize your entire research experience. A good historiography, like a well written annotated bibliography, is an extremely helpful tool for your reader.

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