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History as Literature
There has been much discussion as to whether history should not henceforth be treated as a branch of science rather than of literature.… As regards part of the discussion, the minds of the contestants have not met, the propositions advanced by the two sides being neither mutually incompatible nor mutually relevant. There is, however, a real basis for conflict in so far as science claims exclusive possession of the field.
Theodore
Roosevelt

History as Literature

Theodore Roosevelt

In his preface, Theodore Roosevelt states, “In these addresses and essays I have discussed not merely literary but also historical and scientific subjects, for my thesis is that the domain of literature must be ever more widely extended over the domains of history and science.” These engaging and thought-provoking works cover such topics as modern art, the pursuit of scholarship, science and history, and the poetry of Dante.

Bibliographic Record Preface

Contents

NEW YORK: CHARLES SCRIBNER’S SONS, 1913
NEW YORK: BARTLEBY.COM, 1999

I. HISTORY AS LITERATURE
II. BIOLOGICAL ANALOGIES IN HISTORY
III. THE WORLD MOVEMENT
IV. CITIZENSHIP IN A REPUBLIC
V. THE THRALDOM OF NAMES
VI. PRODUCTIVE SCHOLARSHIP
VII. DANTE AND THE BOWERY
VIII. THE FOUNDATIONS OF THE NINETEENTH CENTURY
IX. THE SEARCH FOR TRUTH IN A REVERENT SPIRIT
X. THE ANCIENT IRISH SAGAS
XI. AART EXHIBITION