ENGL 104W Study Guide - Fraternities And Sororities, Federal Housing Administration, Wrought Iron

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Historians in general have a complicated relationship with audience. Some works of history hit the ny times best-selling list of non-fiction. Those books tend to be books about a kind of history (eg. biographies, popular events) to some degree, historians like to think that they are writing for a popular audience. But there"s always an expectation if you"re an academic historian that you"re writing for other historians. This is mentioned because these two audiences are very different in terms of what impresses them. A popular audience is going to be impressed by nice written prose, heroic narratives. What impresses a scholarly audience is tougher; it"s kind of like playing tennis. It"s not hard to beat a 6 year old at tennis; it"s harder to beat the best world players in tennis. To impress other historians is hard because they already know a lot. So this is the challenge set up for.

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