Jan Pomorski, Ph.D., is a professor and the Chair of the Department of Digital Humanities and Methodology of History in the Maria Curie-Sk¿odowska University, Lublin, Poland. His scientific speciality encompasses the methodology and theory of history, as well as the history of historiography of the 20th century. He is the author of six books (in Polish and English): In a Quest for the Model of Theoretical History (1985), Historian and Methodology (1991), The Road to the Nobel Prize. The New Economic History Paradigm (1995), Looking into Past... Studies and Sketches in Metahistory (2017), Homo Metahistoricus. A Study of Six Cognising Cultures of History (2019), and On Historical Imagination. Exercises in Hermeneutics (2021).
Introduction 1. Jerzy Topolski: From the Methodology of History to the Theory of Historical Narrative 2. Historicity of the Being. Krzysztof Pomian's Theory of History 3. The Historical Imagination in the 21st Century Central and Eastern Europe. The Case of Olga Tokarczuk
This book traces the development of the Polish theory of history, analysing how Jerzy Topolski, Krzysztof Pomian, and Olga Tokarczuk have both built upon and transgressed the metahistorical theories of American historian Hayden White.
Poland's reception of White's work has gone through different phases, from distancing to a period of fascination and eventual critical analysis, beginning with Topolski's methodological school in the 1980s. Topolski played a major role in international debates on historical theory in the second half of the 20th century. The book's second study is a rare opportunity for English-speaking audiences to engage with the thoughts of Pomian, a philosopher and historian of ideas who has both complemented and developed theories of historical cognition independently from White. In the final chapter, the book presents a study of the historical imagination in 21st-century Central and Eastern Europe through the work of novelist Tokarczuk, the winner of the 2018 Nobel Prize in Literature. In considering the contributions of these three thinkers, the book explores the active process by which past becomes history and thus motivates contemporary actions and realities.
By deconstructing and reconstructing contemporary theories of history, this research is a unique contribution to the fields of historiography and the philosophy of history.