When the monograph is no longer the message: Historical narrative in cyberspace
Publication date
2009-11-14
Authors
Rigney, A.
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DOI
Document Type
Article
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Abstract
Over the last fifty years there has been much discussion about the value of narrative in the
production of historical knowledge whereby it is generally assumed that “narrative” is a
given and that the only thing at issue is its epistemological value. This article critically examines
this assumption. It shows how conceptions of “narrative” have mutated in response
to changes in cultural practice and, as importantly, how they have been implicitly modeled
on the particular medium envisaged for telling stories: the stand-alone monograph.
The belief that history’s natural form is a book written by an individual historian has thus
informed most discussions of narrative in the twentieth century, meaning that the primacy
of language, the autonomy of the author, and the finished, self-contained character of the
work have been taken for granted. The “naturalness” of the stand-alone monograph can
no longer be taken as a given, however, in the new media ecologies. Digitization and the
internet offer new technologies for producing and disseminating historical knowledge and,
in the process, present both opportunities and challenges to professional historians. Beyond
their practical implications, the digital media also provide a new theoretical model for
viewing historical narrative in terms of its social production by multiple agents across different
platforms, and this changes our understanding both of past and of future practices.
Keywords
Narrative, travelling concepts, digitization, new media ecologies, multimodality, distributed authorship