History of mentalities explained

The history of mentalities, from the French term histoire des mentalités, is an approach to cultural history which aims to describe and analyze the ways in which historical people thought about, interacted with, and classified the world around them, as opposed to the history of particular events, or economic trends. The history of mentalities has been used as a historical tool by several historians and scholars from various schools of history. Notably, the historians of the Annales School helped to develop the history of mentalities and construct a methodology from which to operate. In establishing this methodology, they sought to limit their analysis to a particular place and a particular time.[1] This approach lends itself to the intensive study that characterizes microhistory, another field which adopted the history of mentalities as a tool of historical analysis.

History

Annales

The origin of the concept of a history of mentalities lies in the writings of the 1st Annales historian Marc Bloch with the concept then taken up by later theorists such as Georges Duby and Roger Chartier. In seeking to create works of total history, Annales historians tended not to simply rely on the political or event-oriented history of past generations.[2] Historian Michael Harsgor points out in that the challenge of the Annales historians was not to create this deterministic history that appeared to rely heavily on teleological conclusions, such as the Marxist forms of history being written at the time. Rather, Harsgor writes that the Annales historians tasked themselves with the creation of social structures, "which means covering the skeleton of the basic economic analysis with the flesh of demographic, cultural, mental, and event psychoanalytical data."[2] It has also been said that Annales historians, in their attempts at creating "total history," considered the history of mentalities a single aspect in the creation of that history.[3] Simply put, they were attempting to reconstruct the world of whatever time period they were examining. In his works, such as The Three Orders: Feudal Society Imagined and his writings on William Marshal, Duby focused on the development of ideologies within the structures that permeated the various aspects of an individual's life.[1]

Microhistory

This development in methodology would prove crucial for other historians who would use the history of mentalities to attempt to edit views of people and make microhistories out of them. These historians would largely concern themselves with social and cultural history in order to form their history of mentalities, narrowing their realm historical inquiry by not concerning themselves with the broad economic serialization that had become so important for the Annales historians.[2] Carlo Ginzburg's book, The Cheese and the Worms, is archetypical of the microhistories that emerged with the history of mentalities in mind. Ginzburg attempted to reconstruct peasant mentalities in sixteenth century Italy by examining the trial records of a single miller, Domenico Scandella, called Menocchio, and trying to find currents or similarities in otherwise fragmentary and obscure evidence.[4]

Similar techniques can be seen in Robert Darnton's The Great Cat Massacre, which uses microhistory to establish the mentalities of groups at different social levels of French society. Darnton concerns himself greatly with the ways in which people viewed the world around them. He interprets the symbolic significance of journeymen printers massacring neighborhood cats as a display of frustration with the growing bourgeoisie class.[5] Similarly, and in keeping with the tradition of the history of mentalities, Darnton devotes a chapter to an analysis of a bourgeoisie's description of his city, in an effort to determine how an individual in a given social situation would interpret and make sense of the world around them. Darnton uses this description to demonstrate that the ways in which events might be portrayed might be completely unsupported by the ways in which individuals of the time might have interpreted those events.[5]

Criticism

Criticisms have emerged regarding the history of mentalities at all stages of its development. In particular, Marxist historians were quick to criticize the Annales historians for "attempts to include the study of mentalities in a general synthesis, which can only lead to the publication of articles reflecting a basic reliance upon faith accompanied by a consequent disparagement of reason."[2] Carlo Ginzburg himself has criticized the methods of the history of mentalities for its "decidedly classless character."[4]

See also

Further reading

. Peter Burke (historian). Burke. Peter. Varieties of Cultural History. 1997. Polity Press. Cambridge. 978-0745616995. Digital. 'Strengths and Weaknesses in the History of Mentalities'. 162–82.

revised from original publication in History of European Ideas, 7 (1986), 439–51.

. Roger Chartier. Cultural History: Between Practices and Representations. 1988. Cornell University Press. Ithaca, N.Y.. 9780801422232. 1st. English.

. Philippe Poirrier. Les enjeux de l'histoire culturelle. 2004. Éd. du Seuil. Paris. 978-2020492454. New.

Notes and References

  1. Book: Duby. Georges. The Three Orders: Feudal Society Imagined. 1980. University of Chicago Press. Chicago.
  2. Harsgor. Michael. Total History: The Annales School. Journal of Contemporary History. January 1978. 13. 1. 1–13. 10.1177/002200947801300101. 159739911.
  3. Hutton. Patrick. The History of Mentalities: The New Map of Cultural History. History and Theory. October 1981. 20. 3. 239. 10.2307/2504556. 2504556.
  4. Book: Ginzburg. Carlo. The Cheese and the Worms: The Cosmos of a Sixteenth-Century Miller. 2013. The Johns Hopkins University Press. Baltimore.
  5. Book: Darnton. Robert. The Great Cat Massacre and Other Episodes in French Cultural History. 1984. Basic Books. New York.