-
Gospel truth? History and the writing of the New Testament

By Robert Evans @R_AH_Evans This Sunday, millions around the world will gather to celebrate Easter. They will listen to historical documents written almost two thousand years ago, purporting to describe the last hours, death, and physical resurrection of Jesus of Nazareth, a religious teacher from first-century Palestine. Those events, and the documents which supposedly describe them,…
-
Historian Highlight: Eric Hobsbawm (1917-2012)

by Chris Campbell @Chris__Campbell Although the idea of the ‘public historian’ is a relatively recent concept – spurred on by the growth in consumption of documentaries, podcasts, blogs and social media – there have always been academic historians who have found a broader readership and commanded a certain influence amongst the general public. This new…
-
The Methodology of Feyerabend’s ‘Against Method’

by Bipasha Bhattacharyya, @Bipasha05235299 “Science is an essentially anarchic enterprise”[i] begins Feyerabend’s controversial book; And with it, the author becomes “science’s worst enemy.”[ii] This epithet is not all that surprising for the ‘serious academic’. After all, anarchy means Guy Fawkes’s masks, and burning effigies, cheers of Inquilab Zindabad on the streets of West Bengal…
-
Navigating Beyond the Naga Conflict: A Clash of Systems

by Vinolen John, @vinolenjohn Studies concerning histories of conflicts are always a thin line to tread. This is particularly true with regards to Naga History which revolves around facets of decolonisation, nation and identity construction, insurgency and conflict, inter alia. The Nagas are a group of disparate tribes in the highlands of India’s northeast and…

