History through material culture is a concise guide for historians focused on how to use material culture as a source.
About the Author: Leonie Hannan is Research Fellow in Eighteenth-Century History at Queen\'s University, Belfast Sarah Longair is Lecturer in the History of Empire at the University of Lincoln.
It is an ideal textbook for the many courses in History and museum and heritage studies devoted to the study of material culture.
History through material culture provides an indispensable guide for students at undergraduate and postgraduate levels, and independent researchers new to the study of objects, in History and related disciplines in the humanities.
The authors are both historians with experience of working in museums and, consequently, the book contains a wealth of practical advice on how to access, study and write about objects stored in such institutions.
It draws on a range of examples from across the world, from apparently mundane everyday items to those stored in national museums, and concentrates on the early modern and modern eras.
By outlining the development of different disciplinary approaches and synthesising a range of complex methodological and theoretical arguments, the book aids researchers in developing their own original project.
The book aims to inspire readers to use objects as historical sources by highlighting the many new and exciting avenues of research which this rich evidence opens up.
Written in an engaging and clear style, it provides step-by-step instructions for researchers interested in incorporating the study of objects into their historical practice.
History through material culture is a concise guide for historians focused on how to use material culture as a source