Certeau, Michel de

Writing of history - New York : Columbia University Press, 1988 - xxviii, 368 p. ; ill., 22 cm. - European perspectives .

Includes bibliographical references and index.

A leading intellectual member of France's Freudian school, Michel de Certeau combined principles from the disciplines of religion, history, and psychoanalysis in order to redefine historiography and rethink the categories of history. In The Writing of History, de Certeau examines the West's changing conceptions of the very role and nature of history itself, from the seventeenth-century attempts to formulate a "history of man" to Freud's Moses and Monotheism with which de Certeau interprets historical practice as a function of mankind's feelings of loss, mourning, and absence. Exhaustively researched and stunningly innovative, The Writing of History is a crucial introduction to de Certeau's work and is destined to become a classic of modern thought.

9780231055758


Historiography
Christianity
Cultural model
Elitist culture
Ethnography
Exorcism
Hagiography
Travel literature
Exorcism
Foucault, Miche
Freud, Sigmund
Levi-Strauss, Claude
Travel literature

907.2 / CER

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