Smoked Salmon:
i did not mean "hmm" in relation to what you said about him being a polemist. I think that sums him up COMPLETELY, he is afterall, writing a very controversial stance on a very controversial issue...if that isn't a polemic, then i don't know what is!
I mean "hmm" in relation to me being organised, as you said i was. Sorry for the lack of clarity.
It's my LAST exam....gosh am i one VERY HAPPY GIRL that it will be over in 2 days...!!!!
About the structure of Q2, well i have always done it as a mix of the two possible structures, but i have always hated how jumbled it is. We had a revision class today, and i asked the question about structure and my teacher agreed there is no sylish way to structure the essay. Thing is, when i don't feel good about the structure, the level of coherency kind of wanes as well...
One last thing: I hope people have heard of Alan Bullock, because i am having trouble 'labelling' him as a particular type of historian. I once thought he was influenced by the Annales School, but now i am not so sure. He believes the historian cannot escape his bias, as he is influenced invariably by his context, but that he should try to check this bias. Bullock demands that generalisations about human nature, etc. be done away with; that history is about breaking down assumptions not buidling them up. He goes on to say in 'The Philosophy of History in Our Time' (written 1959) that the historian should not find out "why they had to follow...but why in fact they followed'. (he is obviously referring to evets, noting that prediction and hindsight should not occur in history, that we have to experience the events as they happened, not as we now know the sequences.)
So...who has studied Bullock at least in part, and can help me label him???
I await enlightenment...haha
Thanx