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History Workshop Journal 2008 65(1):49-64; doi:10.1093/hwj/dbm071
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© The Author 2008. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of History Workshop Journal, all rights reserved.

On the Advantage and Disadvantage of Sentimental History for Life

Mark Salber Phillips

E-mail: markphil{at}connect.carleton.ca


   Abstract

This essay pursues a double purpose. In its larger context, the essay follows up on a set of earlier, more theoretical investigations in which the idea of "distance" is advanced as a tool for analyzing the variety of ways in which historians have sought to mediate the "then" and the "now" of history. More particularly, the essay proposes that one of the characteristic features of recent historical writing (as well as other forms of representation) has been its strongly affective way of approaching the past. In fact, much historical thought since the 1960s has been devoted to exploring affective issues, not simply as an important thematic for historical writing, but more profoundly as a privileged way of constructing a relationship to the past. This historical sensibility is moved by a relatively novel curiosity since it is often less concerned with what happened and why, as with what it was it like to be there. Focusing on a few examples of this approach – especially Marion Kaplan's Between Dignity and Despair, Judith Walkowitz's City of Dreadful Delight, and Christopher Browning's Ordinary Men – the essay explores some of the ethical tensions inherent in empathetic engagement.


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