New Left historiography

E529826

New Left historiography is a radical approach to writing history that centers the experiences and struggles of marginalized groups, emphasizing class conflict, race, gender, and grassroots movements over traditional elite-focused narratives.

All labels observed (1)

Label Occurrences
New Left historiography canonical 1

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Statements (47)

Predicate Object
instanceOf historiographical approach
intellectual movement in history writing
radical historiography
aimsTo challenge dominant power structures in historical narratives
recover voices of oppressed groups
associatedWith E. P. Thompson NERFINISHED
Herbert Gutman NERFINISHED
Howard Zinn NERFINISHED
Jesse Lemisch NERFINISHED
Staughton Lynd NERFINISHED
contrastsWith traditional elite-focused historiography
critiques Whig interpretation of history
consensus history
elite political narratives
emergedInContextOf New Left political movement NERFINISHED
emergedInPeriod 1960s
emergedInRegion United Kingdom NERFINISHED
United States NERFINISHED
emphasizes agency of ordinary people
history from below
social history
hasMainFocus class conflict
experiences of marginalized groups
gender
grassroots movements
race
influenced later cultural history
radical public history
subaltern studies NERFINISHED
influencedBy Marxist historiography
anti-colonial movements
civil rights movement NERFINISHED
feminist movement
notableWork A People's History of the United States NERFINISHED
The Making of the English Working Class NERFINISHED
oftenCriticizedFor ideological bias
overemphasis on class or conflict
relatedTo Black history
labor history
postcolonial history
social history
women's history
seeksTo link past struggles to contemporary social movements
usesMethod archival research on social movements
interdisciplinary approaches
oral history
viewsHistoryAs site of political struggle

How these facts were elicited

Referenced by (1)

Full triples — surface form annotated when it differs from this entity's canonical label.