Wiley has partnerships with many of the world’s leading societies and publishes over 1,500 peer-reviewed journals and 1,500+ new books annually in print and online, as well as databases, major reference works and laboratory protocols in STMS subjects. Wiley has published the works of more than 450 Nobel laureates in all categories: Literature, Economics, Physiology or Medicine, Physics, Chemistry, and Peace. has been a valued source of information and understanding for more than 200 years, helping people around the world meet their needs and fulfill their aspirations. Our core businesses produce scientific, technical, medical, and scholarly journals, reference works, books, database services, and advertising professional books, subscription products, certification and training services and online applications and education content and services including integrated online teaching and learning resources for undergraduate and graduate students and lifelong learners. Wiley is a global provider of content and content-enabled workflow solutions in areas of scientific, technical, medical, and scholarly research professional development and education. The electronic version of History and Theory isĪuthorized users may be able to access the full text articles at this site. JSTOR provides a digital archive of the print version of History and Natural and social sciences, the humanities, and psychology. Of humanity-in-time related disciplines, interactions between history and the Marxism, deconstruction, gender theory, psychoanalysis time and culture, conceptions Theoretical dimensions of historians' debates history of historiography, theoryĪnd practice of past historians and philosophers of history historical methodology,Įxamination of texts and other evidence, narrativism, stylistics critical theory, Speculative philosophy of history, comparative and global history historiography, Publishes articles, review essays, and summaries of books principally in theseĪreas: critical philosophy of history, cause, explanation, interpretation, objectivity History and Theory is the premier international journal in the field But our new "postmodern" distinctions between master and local narratives have carried over the venerable antinomy of people with and without history, and the search for timeless formal principles differentiating "historical" and "nonhistorical" modes of discourse and ways of being threatens to create new varieties of essentialism. The development has led to some surprising homologies and contrasts among the new histories created by thinkers from Claude Levi-Strauss and Jean-Francois Lyotard to James Clifford and Francis Fukuyama. From this convergence-a growing wariness of global stories coupled with situations which seem to demand them-has emerged a popular new double plot of world history in which cultural differentiation and cultural homogenization go hand in hand. But our increasingly global situations demand stories that can describe and explain the worldwide interactions of diverse cultures and communities. Master narrative, like its predecessors Universal History and speculative philosophy of history, has become something to avoid. The phrase "master or meta narrative" has grown popular for describing stories which seem to assimilate different cultures into a single course of history dominated by the West. This article traces the competing meanings of "master narrative" in current theoretical debates over history and culture.
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