“Then They Pressed On”

Author(s):  
Susan Schroeder

Chimalpahin’s Nahuatl-language annals afford an indigenous and often-personal perspective on the importance of women, family, and community to the history of Nahua migration and settlement in early central Mesoamerica. Most remarkable, perhaps, is the diversity of peoples and accounts, the undertakings themselves, and the extraordinary realization of accomplishment at each journey’s end.

1997 ◽  
Vol 13 (3) ◽  
pp. 430-453 ◽  
Author(s):  
H. David Banta ◽  
Seymour Perry

AbstractThis reflection on the history of the International Society of Technology Assessment in Health Care is an effort to describe the creation of the Society and its first 10 years of activity. Without analyzing the forces that spurred the growth of technology assessment internationally or linking events, policies, and changes in the various countries, this essay focuses on the persons and events that surrounded the birth and growth of the Society in the past decade.


2020 ◽  
pp. 139-162
Author(s):  
Colin Foss

The last chapter shows with how the historical became personal during the Siege. This chapter shows how Siege diarists imagined their amateur contribution to historiography. While professional historians of the Romantic tradition wrote from a personal perspective, they did not privilege experience and anonymity as guarantors of authenticity. The modest perspective of Siege diarists, however, formed the basis of their ability to tell what many of them called the true story of the Siege. Personal claims to historical fact placed anonymous individuals at the heart of history. These diarists wrote the collective history of their present moment, meaning that they can be considered at once historiography and historical documents.


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