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Ian W. Mabbett

Writing History Essays: A Student's Guide Hardcover – January 1, 2006

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Writing History Essays (Bloomsbury Study Skills, 40)

  • Print length 172 pages
  • Language English
  • Publisher Palgrave Macmillan
  • Publication date January 1, 2006
  • Dimensions 5.5 x 0.5 x 8.75 inches
  • ISBN-10 1403997691
  • ISBN-13 978-1403997692
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  • Publisher ‏ : ‎ Palgrave Macmillan; First Edition (January 1, 2006)
  • Language ‏ : ‎ English
  • Hardcover ‏ : ‎ 172 pages
  • ISBN-10 ‏ : ‎ 1403997691
  • ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-1403997692
  • Item Weight ‏ : ‎ 12.1 ounces
  • Dimensions ‏ : ‎ 5.5 x 0.5 x 8.75 inches

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writing history essays a student's guide

Storey, Writing History: A Guide for Students 6e

writing history essays a student's guide

Description

Bringing together practical methods from both history and composition, Writing History , Sixth Edition, provides a wealth of tips and advice to help students research and write essays for history classes. Now with a lay-flat binding that further increases the book's utility, Writing History covers all aspects of writing about history, including finding and researching topics, interpreting source materials, drawing inferences from sources, and constructing arguments. It concludes with three chapters that discuss writing effective sentences, using precise wording, and revising. Using numerous examples from the works of cultural, political, and social historians, Writing History serves as an ideal text in any history course that asks students to conduct research.

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Writing history essays : a student's guide /

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  • Table of Contents

Similar Items

  • Author's Note'
  • 1. A History Essay is History
  • The practice of history is a craft
  • History is also an art
  • A history essay is history
  • 2. A History Essay is Academic, is an Essay, is Literature
  • A history essay is academic writing
  • A history essay is an essay
  • A history essay is literature
  • 3. The History Essay as a Process
  • History begins with a question...
  • ...and proceeds to an answer
  • Approaching the writing of an essay
  • Studying history as independent learning
  • 4. Knowing your Sources
  • Types of source
  • Exploiting primary sources
  • Exploiting secondary and tertiary sources
  • The Internet
  • First and last things to read
  • 5. Reading Critically
  • Reading for information and reading for ideas
  • The problem of authority
  • Distinguishing between factual evidence and judgment or opinion
  • Prejudice and bias
  • 6. Explanation and Judgment
  • What counts as explanation?
  • Minimum reasonable assumptions
  • Anachronistic standards of judgment
  • Historical imagination
  • Judgment and relativism
  • 7. Noting What you Read
  • Do not copy out verbatim from books
  • When to write out quotations
  • Common-sense guidelines
  • Note-taking examples
  • 8. Planning
  • Deciding on essentials
  • The cycle of argument
  • The introduction
  • The plan of attack
  • Choosing the evidence to put in
  • The logic of your argument
  • The conclusion
  • 9. Writing and Independent Thought
  • Identifying plagiarism
  • Avoiding plagiarism by offering independent thought
  • Paraphrase in presenting factual evidence
  • Good and bad use of what you read: a longer example
  • 10. Drafting Your Essay
  • Every sentence gives a signal
  • Make sure that the logical structure is plain
  • Avoiding tendentious language in your writing
  • Writing the conclusion
  • Matching words to ideas
  • 11. Documenting Your Essay
  • Giving references
  • 'In-text' citation systems
  • What sort of documentation style suits history?
  • Text in footnotes
  • Good and bad footnoting
  • Bibliography
  • The importance of citation
  • 12. Revision and Correction
  • Some principles of revision
  • Layout and presentation
  • A check-list of revision points
  • A proof-reading exercise
  • Benefiting from conferring about corrections
  • Common errors
  • 13. Beyond the History Essay
  • Document criticism
  • Book reviews
  • The literature review or critical historiographic essay
  • Seminar introduction papers
  • Examination answers
  • 14. The Importance of Good English Expression
  • Accuracy of English expression
  • Punctuation
  • Handling quotations
  • Appendix. A Note on Historiography

H. Sumner Brown Memorial Fund- Jane Synek Brown, Jennifer Sumner Brown, Malcolm Sumner Brown bookplate

  • Essaying the past : how to read, write, and think about history / by: Cullen, Jim, 1962- Published: (2013)
  • Essaying the past : how to read, write, and think about history / by: Cullen, Jim, 1962- Published: (2009)
  • Writing history : a guide for students / by: Storey, William Kelleher Published: (2009)
  • Writing history : a guide for students / by: Storey, William Kelleher Published: (2013)
  • Writing history : a guide for students / by: Storey, William Kelleher Published: (1999)

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20 When to use Citations and Quotations

Basic rules for both:.

A good historical essay keeps the support for its argument transparent and its readers engaged. These two priorities—allowing readers to follow the evidence and judge it for themselves, while reminding them why they should care, as the story involves real people and their thoughts—can help students decide when they must use a citation and/or when they should use a quote from their sources, whether primary or secondary.

When to include a footnote (or endnote):

In terms of citations (footnotes or endnotes, depending on your professor’s instructions or your preference in the absence of instructions, as they are the same), the general rule is that you need to help your readers check your evidence to see if your evidence supports your thesis, should they choose to so. However, there are some specific occasions when you must use a footnote/endnote:

  • Direct quotes from a primary or secondary source
  • P araphrased information from either a primary or secondary source. Even if you are changing the words, you are still responsible for showing where you got your information. Mature scholars name the source (or, more likely, sources) that laid the groundwork for their own analysis. Doing so doesn’t make you seem unknowledgeable, but rather helps your readers understand how you are building knowledge.
  • Facts that are not well known . You do not have to cite a source for noting when the US joined World War I, or for the route that Lewis and Clark took—as those are knowable facts from any number of sources. But if you cite specific conversations held between cabinet officials prior to the War, or detail the Native groups met at each bend in the river—material another scholar found by research primary sources—you must cite that scholar. Show your readers where you found new, or not widely known information.
  • Another scholar’s controversial opinion . If you refer to a claim about the past that isn’t widely accepted—that is, not concerning when the Civil War began, but rather which politicians were to blame for its outbreak—you need to cite where you got that opinion. (Of course, you do not need to provide citations for your own analysis, controversial or otherwise.)
  • Statistics – these are like lesser-known facts, given that statistics can vary depending upon who compiled them. For this reason, you need to cite where you found your numerical facts and figures.

Two other footnote/endnote rules:

  • “Talking” or annotated notes: If it’s helpful for readers to understand additional information that’s not so critical that it belongs in the text, you may provide an explanatory foot/end note with information beyond the source citation. Beware though—some editors and instructors don’t approve, as they believe that any information not critical to the argument is not critical to the essay.
  • Condensing foot/end notes: Many journals and instructors allow you to provide a citation at the end of a paragraph with the multiple sources that helped you create that paragraph, rather than providing a citation at every sentence, or portion of sentence that rested on a secondary source.

When to quote directly:

In many ways, the same situations that call for a citation to the general source also make for a good situation in which to include a direct quotation (as opposed to paraphrasing your information). At the same time, you don’t want to overquote—we’re interested in your thoughts, not those of five other experts. You should also use your own words unless there’s a compelling need to quote, such as bringing in a unique voice or capturing a controversial fact or opinion. A good essay offers variety in a number of ways—word choice, sentence structure, and which sources provide quotations. Here are some places where a direct quotation from the source are warranted:

  • An authoritative source—the main book on a topic—says something important or controversial.
  • When any source uses language that is compelling, and thus should not just be paraphrased.
  • In order to get the “flavor” or language of the wording from a primary source.
  • Most quotes in your paper should come from primary sources, not secondary ones.

How to quote:

  • Avoid “block quotes” unless the reader must see a large portion of the primary source to understand your analysis, and all of that explanation must be in the source’s voice. That is, when quoting, include just enough of the quotation to make sense, without adding parts of the quote that don’t pertain to your analysis or go into more detail than needed. But on the whole, phrases or a single sentence cover your bases.
  • When you do need to use a block quote, indent it and use single spacing.
  • Never let any quote—including a rare block quote—stand on its own. You must explain what the source means. The requirement that all sources must be analyzed in the text means that you should not begin or end a paragraph with a quotation, except perhaps in a very rare stylistic moment when doing so will not leave the reader confused.
  • If you do not want to use all your source’s words, you may use ellipses, which are three spaced dots like this (make sure you put a space between each period, never put them directly beside each other): . . .
  • If you would like to use a source’s words, but need to change something to make it fit into your sentence (such as a verb tense or a pronoun) use square brackets for a word you changed. You may NOT change an entire word.
  • However, if you need to change several words in a quotation, it’s usually best to quote only a phrase, rather than burdening a quote with ellipses and brackets.
  • Make sure that your quote supports the point you’re trying to make and doesn’t read like a random quote from the individual under examination.

Some examples from Mary Rowland’s Captivity Narrative [1682]

Mary Rowlandson was a Puritan woman who was captured by Native Americans during King Phillip’s War and held captive for eleven weeks. When she returned to her home, she wrote a narrative about her experiences. What follows are some examples of how you might use parts of one quotation from Rowlandson’s book. From that primary source:

“It is not my tongue, or pen, can express the sorrows of my heart, and bitterness of my spirit that I had at this departure: but God was with me in a wonderful manner, carrying me along, and bearing up my spirit, that it did not quite fail. One of the Indians carried my poor wounded babe upon a horse; it went moaning all along, ‘I shall die, I shall die.’ I went on foot after it, with sorrow that cannot be expressed.”

  • Double quotation marks [“] signal the beginning and end of a quotation. If there are quotations within what you are quoting—in this case, the words of the child [“I shall die, I shall die”]—mark them with single quotation marks [‘]. The use of double quotations are standard in American English (but not British English). Single quotes within double quotes indicate interior quotes the passage.
  • See the indent in the example above, which counts as “long.”

If I wanted to use the quote to discuss Rowlandson’s state of mind :

Early in her captivity, Mary Rowlandson experienced enormous fear and loss. As she put it, her “pen [could not] express the sorrows of my heart, and bitterness of my spirit” upon leaving her community.

  • In the state of mind quote above, the part of the quote that covers her faith isn’t necessary to make this point and is omitted.
  • In the above example, the altered verb tense ( could not , rather than can ) flows better with the sentence but does not change Rowlandson’s meaning.
  • Changing verb tenses and substituting or clarifying a pronoun that is not clear in the original mark the limits of altering a quote, for the most part.
  • Any source quoted must fit the point .
  • This passage is about her feelings, not what the Indians were doing.
  • It’s also incorrect because there are no “stitching” words or a colon to link the primary source quote to the analytical statement of the author.
  • Correct : The Indians who captured Rowlandson were particularly cruel. As Rowlandson noted, while her child moaned, she “went on foot after it, with sorrow that cannot be expressed.”
  • For example, in a sentence about how Rowlandson used language that suggested a physical experience of faith: Rowlandson referred to physical, rather than emotional, manifestations of her faith frequently. For example, she spoke of “God . . . carrying me along, and bearing up my spirit.”
  • Note that brackets were not necessary because all words are in original.
  • Note that the language of “poor wounded babe” is an expressive phrase that captures Rowlandson’s voice.
  • Substituting [the child] for “it” makes the sentence clearer.

How History is Made: A Student’s Guide to Reading, Writing, and Thinking in the Discipline Copyright © 2022 by Stephanie Cole; Kimberly Breuer; Scott W. Palmer; and Brandon Blakeslee is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International License , except where otherwise noted.

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Citation Guide

The History Department's Concise Guide to Essay Writing includes several pages on footnotes and bibliography layout. This should be accessible via your course's Learn site.

UC History uses the Chicago, notes and bibliography (NB), style, which their guide is based on. For  a range of related referencing examples this Purdue University Online Writing Lab (OWL) is also well worth exploring.

Books about history research & writing

Going to the sources : a guide to historical research and writing The historian's toolbox : a student's guide to the theory and craft of history The information-literate historian : a guide to research for history students A short guide to writing about history Writing history essays : a student's guide Writing history : theory & practice

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COMMENTS

  1. Writing History Essays: A Student's Guide

    To write history successfully, it is essential to understand the nuts and bolts of technique as well as the underlying principles which govern the whole process. Writing History Essays takes you step by step through the process of writing an assignment, breaking it down into a series of manageable tasks, including: - Selecting sources- Reading critically- Taking notes- Planning and drafting ...

  2. Writing history essays : a student's guide : Mabbett, Ian W : Free

    Search the history of over 866 billion web pages on the Internet. Search the Wayback Machine. An illustration of a magnifying glass. ... Writing history essays : a student's guide by Mabbett, Ian W. Publication date 2006 Topics History -- Methodology, Academic writing Publisher New York : Palgrave Macmillan

  3. Writing History Essays: A Student's Guide

    Writing History Essays: A Student's Guide. Paperback - January 1, 2006. To write history successfully, it is essential to understand the nuts and bolts of technique as well as the underlying principles which are too rarely made explicit, but which govern the whole process. I.W. Mabbett carefully analyzes these principles, and takes us step-by ...

  4. PDF The History Student's Handbook

    The History Student's Handbook. History is a discipline based on interpretation, debate, analysis, and synthe-sis. Because of this, history essays are more than narrative accounts of the past. The purpose of a history essay is to communicate useful conclusions about past events in a purposeful and persuasive manner.

  5. Writing History Essays: A Student's Guide: Bloomsbury Study Skills Ian

    Writing History Essays takes you step by step through the process of writing an assignment, breaking it down into a series of manageable tasks, including: - Referencing correctly and avoiding plagiarism. This book also takes you beyond the essay, with practical advice on writing book reviews, reports and dissertations, as well as guidance on ...

  6. Writing History Essays: A Student's Guide Paperback

    Writing History Essays: A Student's Guide. Paperback - 24 Oct. 2006. by Ian Mabbett (Author) 3.7 10 ratings. See all formats and editions. To write history successfully, it is essential to understand the nuts and bolts of technique as well as the basic underlying principles which are too rarely made explicit, but which govern the whole process.

  7. Writing Historical Essays

    Purpose. The purpose of this guide is to provide you with the basics for writing undergraduate history essays and papers. It is a guide only, and its step by step approach is only one possible model; it does not replace consultation with your professor, TA, or instructor about writing questions and getting feedback, nor the excellent tutoring services provided by the Rutgers Writing Center ...

  8. PDF Writing History Essays

    A paragraph is a coherent collection of separate sentences that form one major idea and a group of lesser related ideas. A paragraph should contain only one major point, and all the minor elements in a paragraph should be connected. If the major point appears in the first sentence, it appears in the topic sentence.

  9. Writing History Essays: A Student's Guide: Mabbett, I. W

    Writing History Essays is the sort of textbook that gets adopted in gut reaction to the rising flood of illiterate student essays. Mabbett is a model of thoroughness and earnestness, the sort of author one hopes will succeed. Nothing, however, can disguise the essential dullness of his book. Here is Mabbett on the use of language in history ...

  10. How History is Made: A Student's Guide to Reading, Writing, and

    How History is Made: A Student's Guide to Reading, Writing, and Thinking in the Discipline ... Typical essay structures in history do not start broadly and steadily narrow over the course of the essay, like a giant inverted triangle. If thinking in terms of a geometric shape helps you to conceptualize what a good introduction does, think of ...

  11. Writing History Essays: A Student's Guide: Bloomsbury Study Skills Ian

    To write history successfully, it is essential to understand the nuts and bolts of technique as well as the underlying principles which govern the whole process…

  12. Writing History : A Guide for Students

    An indispensable resource for thousands of history students over five editions, Writing History: A Guide for Students provides a wealth of tips and advice to help students research and write essays for history classes. Bringing together practical methods from both history and composition, it covers all aspects of writing about history, including finding and researching topics, interpreting ...

  13. Writing History Essays: A Student's Guide Hardcover

    Writing History Essays is an indispensable aid for all those studying history and is ideal for beginners. Focusing on the fundamentals, this helpful and informative guide demonstrates that it is through the writing of history essays that we learn the nature of the discipline. Read more. ISBN-10. 1403997691.

  14. Writing History: A Guide for Students 6e

    Description. Bringing together practical methods from both history and composition, Writing History, Sixth Edition, provides a wealth of tips and advice to help students research and write essays for history classes. Now with a lay-flat binding that further increases the book's utility, Writing History covers all aspects of writing about ...

  15. How History is Made: A Student's Guide to Reading, Writing, and

    Many history essays have a natural chronological focus. Arguments that seek to explain what happened at a place and time, or demonstrate what led up to an event, as well as essays that focus on an individual's importance, can be organized chronologically. Intro; Early phase or antecedents; Middle years or main event; Later years or impact ...

  16. Writing history essays : a student's guide / I.W. Mabbett

    Acknowledgement of Country. The National Library of Australia acknowledges Australia's First Nations Peoples - the First Australians - as the Traditional Owners and Custodians of this land and gives respect to the Elders - past and present - and through them to all Australian Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people.

  17. PDF WRITING A GREAT HISTORY PAPER

    Writing a history paper requires much more than just sitting down at a computer. It involves a lot of early planning, detailed research, critical thinking, skilled organization, and careful writing and rewriting. The first rule of essay writing is to start early so that you have plenty of time to follow these steps.

  18. Table of Contents: Writing history essays

    Writing history essays : a student's guide / Saved in: Bibliographic Details; Author / Creator: Mabbett, Ian W. Imprint: Basingstoke, Hampshire ; New York : Palgrave Macmillan, 2007. ... A history essay is academic writing; A history essay is an essay; A history essay is literature; 3. The History Essay as a Process;

  19. How History is Made: A Student's Guide to Reading, Writing, and

    Basic rules for both: A good historical essay keeps the support for its argument transparent and its readers engaged. These two priorities—allowing readers to follow the evidence and judge it for themselves, while reminding them why they should care, as the story involves real people and their thoughts—can help students decide when they must use a citation and/or when they should use a ...

  20. Writing and Citing

    Writing and Citing. The History Department's Concise Guide to Essay Writing includes several pages on footnotes and bibliography layout. This should be accessible via your course's Learn site. UC History uses the Chicago, notes and bibliography (NB), style, which their guide is based on. For a range of related referencing examples this Purdue ...