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・ Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine – External Operations
・ Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine – General Command
・ Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine – Special Command
・ Popular Front for the Liberation of the Occupied Arabian Gulf
・ Popular Front Incident
・ Popular Front of Estonia
・ Popular Front of India
・ Popular Front of Latvia
・ Popular Front of Moldova
・ Popular Front of Potosí
・ Popular Front of the Canary Islands
・ Popular Front Party
・ Popular Future
・ Popular Guard
・ Popular Health Movement
Popular history
・ Popular Holdings
・ Popular Hot Rodding
・ Popular Independent Movement
・ Popular Indigenous Council of Oaxaca "Ricardo Flores Magón"
・ Popular initiative (Switzerland)
・ Popular Italy
・ Popular Liberal Action
・ Popular Liberalism
・ Popular Liberation Army
・ Popular Liberation Forces
・ Popular Liberation Front
・ Popular Liberation Front (Guatemala)
・ Popular Liberation Front (Spain)
・ Popular Liberation Front of Azawad


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Popular history : ウィキペディア英語版
Popular history
Popular history is a broad and somewhat ill-defined genre of historiography that takes a popular approach, aims at a wide readership, and usually emphasizes narrative, personality and vivid detail over scholarly analysis. The term is used in contradistinction to professional academic or scholarly history writing which is usually more specialized and technical and, thus, less accessible to the general reader.
Some popular historians are without academic affiliation while others are academics, or former academics, that have (according to one writer) “become somehow abstracted from the academic arena, becoming cultural commentators”.〔De Groot, Jerome (2009), (''Consuming History: Historians and Heritage in Contemporary Popular Culture'' ), Routledge, pg 15.〕 Many worked as journalists, perhaps after taking an initial degree in history.
Popular historians may become nationally renowned or best-selling authors and may or may not serve the interests of particular political viewpoints in their roles as “public historians”. Many authors of “official histories” and “authorized biographies” would qualify as popular historians serving the interests of particular institutions or public figures.
Popular historians aim to appear on the "general lists" of general publishers, rather than the university presses that have dominated academic publishing in recent years. Increasingly, popular historians have taken to television where they are able, often accompanying a series of documentaries with a tie-in book.
==Examples==
Recent examples of American popular historians with academic affiliations include Stephen Ambrose, Doris Kearns Goodwin and Pauline Maier. Non-academics include Bruce Catton, Shelby Foote, David McCullough, and Barbara Tuchman.
Recent examples of British popular historians include Niall Ferguson, Christopher Hibbert and Simon Schama and – from a previous generation – Eric Hobsbawm, E.P. Thompson, A.J.P. Taylor (an early pioneer of history on television), and Christopher Hill. Much of Hugh Trevor-Roper's output was also directed at a popular audience.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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