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A 3 page research paper that answers this question and discusses the characteristics and standards defining the professional practice among historians. Bibliography lists 2 sources.
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3 pages (~225 words per page)
File: D0_khwhatis.rtf
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the past as a matter of disciplined learned practice" (AHA, 2007). While a few professional historians are self-employed, the majority of historians work for "academic institutions, corporations, government agencies, law
firms, archives, historical societies, museums, parks, historical preservation programs or other institutions" (AHA, 2007). In defining "historian," as a term, it is also true that individuals "all interpret and narrate
the past" (AHA, 2007). Those individuals who do this and publish their observations might be defined as popular historians, as they write for the general public. However, professional historians
are expected to adhere to a rigorous standard of scholarship and therefore their writing indicates all sources, both primary and secondary, and the details of their original research into an
historical era, event or person. As this suggests, historical scholarship, as practiced by professionals, involves interaction between each other, the historical record, and the public as they explore the "most
compelling questions of our own time and place" (AHA, 2007). While a historian may be an advocate for a particular point of view, all historians endeavor to preserve the "integrity
of the historical record" and to present it objectively (AHA, 2007). Therefore, they do not fabricate evidence or engage in speculation that is without some firm foundation in the historical
record (AHA, 2007). Historians acknowledge that they have a debt to the past to do "justice" to the views of that era and present those views, to the best
of the historians ability, in a way that shows how the people of the past perceived themselves, their problems, and their conflicts (AHA, 2007). This position takes into accord that
varied and "conflicting perspectives are among the truths of history" (AHA, 2007). In other words, no single account of a past event or person can ever definitively define the "endless
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