Main interests Theory of history | Name Hayden White Role Historian | |
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Major works Metahistory: The Historical Imagination in Nineteenth-Century Europe Education Awards Guggenheim Fellowship for Humanities, US & Canada Books Metahistory, The Content of the Form, Tropics of Discourse, Figural Realism, The Practical Past | ||
Alma mater University of Michigan |
Hayden white on his biography
Hayden White (born July 12, 1928) is a historian in the tradition of literary criticism, perhaps most famous for his work Metahistory: The Historical Imagination in Nineteenth-Century Europe (1973/2014). He claims that the manifest historical text is marked by strategies of explanation, which include explanation by argument, explanation by emplotment, and explanation by ideological implication. He has argued that historical writing is influenced by literary writing in many ways, sharing the strong reliance on narrative for meaning, therefore eliminating the possibility of objective or truly scientific history. White has also argued, however, that history is most successful when it uses this "narrativity", since it is what allows history to be meaningful. He is currently a professor emeritus of the University of California, Santa Cruz, having retired recently from the job of Professor of comparative literature at Stanford University.
Contents
- Hayden white on his biography
- Hayden white and ethan kleinberg a conversation at wesleyan s center for the humanities
- Career
- Lawsuit against the LAPD
- References

Hayden white and ethan kleinberg a conversation at wesleyan s center for the humanities
Career

White received his B.A. from Wayne State University during 1951 and his M.A. and Ph.D. degrees from the University of Michigan (1952 and 1955, respectively). While an undergraduate at Wayne State, White studied history under William J. Bossenbrook alongside then-classmate Arthur Danto.
During 1998, White directed a seminar ("The Theory of the Text") at the School of Criticism and Theory.
Lawsuit against the LAPD
White figured prominently in a landmark California Supreme Court case regarding covert intelligence gathering on college campuses by police officers in the Los Angeles Police Department. White v. Davis, 13 Cal.3d 757, 533 P.2d 222, 120 Cal. Rptr. 94 (1975). During 1972, while a professor of history at UCLA and acting as sole plaintiff, White sued Chief of Police Edward M. Davis, alleging the illegal expenditure of public funds in connection with covert intelligence gathering by police at UCLA. The covert activities included police officers registering as students, taking notes of discussions occurring in classes, and making police reports on these discussions. White v. Davis, at 762. The Supreme Court found for White in a unanimous decision. This case set the standard that determines the limits of legal police surveillance of political activity in California; police cannot engage in such surveillance in the absence of reasonable suspicion of a crime ("Lockyer Manual").