Artículos de revistas
Virtue Language and Boundary Drawing in Modern Brazilian Historiography: a reading of Historians of Brazil, by Francisco iglesias
Fecha
2019-05-01Registro en:
Historia Da Historiografia. Mariana: Univ Federal Ouro Preto, Dept Historia, v. 12, n. 30, p. 44-70, 2019.
1983-9928
10.15848/hh.v12i30.1475
WOS:000483400100002
Autor
Universidade Estadual Paulista (Unesp)
Institución
Resumen
In Historians of Brazil, Francisco Iglesias reviews some of the great names in Brazilian historiography as divided by him into three distinct moments: up to 1838, from 1838 to 1931, and from 1931 onwards. This article shall focus on the third of these moments, which has traditionally been considered the moment of the modern Brazilian historiography. More specifically, I would like to draw attention to Iglesias' use of virtue and vice language to assess those historians and their works. Virtues and vices have long been used not only in moral evaluations but also in epistemic ones. Being recognized as a historian includes cultivating repertoires of virtues which are deemed to be necessary for actually being a historian. As Iglesias evaluates his predecessors, we will have a glimpse into how a particular way of being a historian - that of the university professor in the 1980s - clashes against previous models of scholarly selfhood.