Generalisation in History

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UNIT 1 GENERALISATION

Structure
1.1 Introduction
1.2 What is a Generalisation?
1.3 Inevitability of Generalisation
1.4 Objections to Generalisation
1.5 Role of Generalisations
1.6 Sources of Generalisation
1.7 How to Improve One’s Capacity to Generalise?
1.8 Summary
1.9 Exercises

1.1 INTRODUCTION
Making generalisations is an important aspect of how historians in practice carry out
their task, or, to quote Marc Bloch, how historians ‘practice our trade.’ It is a very
complex and large subject and covers almost all areas of a historian’s craft. I will
confine myself here to only a few of its aspects:
i) What is a generalisation? All make it sometimes without knowing that one is doing
it. What are the different levels of generalisation?
ii) Why are generalisations inevitable? And why do some people object to them?
iii) What is their role or use, what purpose do they serve in the historian’s craft?
iv) From where do we get generalisations or what are the sources of generalisation or
how to learn to make them in a meaningful manner?
v) How can we improve our capacity to make generalisations?

1.2 WHAT IS A GENERALISATION?


A generalisation is a linkage of disparate or unrelated facts, in time or space, with each
other. It is their grouping, their rational classification. Basically, a generalisation is a
connection or relationship between facts, it is an ‘inference’ or, as Marc Bloch puts it,
‘an explanatory relationship between phenomena.’ It is the result of the effort to provide
an explanation and causation, motivation and effect or impact.
More widely, generalisations are the means through which historians understand their
materials and try to provide their understanding of facts to others. Analysis and
interpretation of events, etc., is invariably done through generalisations.
Generalisation is involved as soon as we perform the two most elementary tasks: classify
‘facts’ or ‘data’ or ‘phenomena’ and compare and contrast them, or seek out similarities
and dissimilarities among them, and make any inference from them.
Thus we make a generalisation when we put our facts into a series one after another.
For example, when we mention the caste or religion of a leader we are making a
generalisation. By connecting the caste and the leader or writer we are suggesting that 7
Understanding History his or her caste was an important part of his or her personality and, therefore, his or her
political or literary work. Or even the mention of his or her age. More comprehensively,
a generalisation occurs when we try to understand facts, or make connection between
data, objects, events, records of the past through concepts and convey them to others
through concepts.
Generalisations may be simple or complex, of low level or of high level.
Low Level: A Low-level generalisation is made when we label a fact or event, or
classify it or periodise it. For example, labelling certain facts as economic, or certain
persons as belonging to a caste, region or religion or profession, or saying that certain
events occurred in a particular year or decade or century.
Middle Level: A middle level generalisation is made when a historian tries to find
interconnections among the different elements of the subject under study; for example,
when we are studying a segment of the social reality of a time, space or subject bound
character. In this case – for example peasant movement in Punjab from 1929-1937 –
the historian may at the most try to see the backward and forward linkages or connections
but confining himself strictly to his subject matter. Themes such as class consciousness,
interest groups, capitalism, colonialism, nationalism and feudalism cannot be tested in a
research work except through middle level generalisations, such as relating to workers
in Jamshedpur in the 1920s, growth of industrial capitalism in India in the 1930s, labour
legislation in India in the 1930s.
Wide generalisations or systematising or schematising generalisations: These
are made when historians reach out to the largest possible, significant connections or
threads that tie a society together . These historians try to study all the economic,
political, social, cultural and ecological linkages of a society in an entire era. The historian
tries to draw a nation-wide or society-wide or even world-wide picture of these linkages
even when he is dealing with a narrow theme. Quite often, even when a historian is
studying a narrow theme, wide generalisations lie at the back of his mind. For example,
quite often when a European scholar studied a specific social or religious aspect of an
Asian or African society, a wider Orientalist understanding of Asia or Africa lay at the
back of his mind. Similarly, quite often when a British scholar studied – or even now
studies – the economic history of an Asian country for a specific period, a wider
understanding of colonialism lies at the back of his mind.
The widest form of wide generalisations is the study of a social system (e.g. capitalism),
or stage of society (e.g. feudalism or colonialism) or, above all, the transition from one
system to another (feudalism to capitalism or colonialism to post-colonialism). Some of
the historians and sociologists who have undertaken such wide generalisations are:
Karl Marx, Max Weber, Marc Bloch, Fernand Braudel, Eric Hobsbawm, Immanuel
Wallerstein, and in India, D.D.Kosambi, R.S.Sharma, Romila Thapar, Irfan Habib.
Metahistory: Metahistory is often unhistorical, since it tries to impose a principle to
organise history from outside history – this principle does not emerge from the concrete
study of history itself. Quite often a single cause or ‘philosophy of history’ is used to
explain all historical development. Examples of this approach are: Hegel, Spengler,
Toynbee or recent writers on ‘The Clash of Civilizations’.
Marxist or Weberian approaches are not examples of Metahistory, for they are theories
for analysing concrete history, society, politics, ideology , etc. The elements of these
approaches can be tested by analysing concrete history. These approaches can be
right even if Marx’s or Weber’s own statements and analysis of concrete historical
events, etc., are proved wrong. On the other hand, if Spengler’s or Toynbee’s analysis
8 of any specific event is proved wrong, his entire theory or approach falls to the ground.
Generalisation
1.3 INEVITABILITY OF GENERALISATION
Generalisations are inevitable. All make them or use them. Even when a historian
thinks that he does not, he does. Generalisations are inherent in the very arrangement of
words. There exists one notion that ‘the historian should gather the data of the past and
arrange it in chronological sequence. Whereupon its meaning would emerge or reveal
itself.’ In other words, the historian’s task is only to test the validity of data or to certify
their authenticity, and not to interpret it, i.e., generalise about it. The opposite view is
that sources in themselves, on their own, cannot reveal their meaning, nor can a pile of
notes, however meticulously collected, ‘tell’ the historian what to write. The material
has to be organised on the basis of some rational principles, i.e., some principle of
selection, of importance or significance, of relevance. Even the notes taken of ‘facts’
have to have some principle of selection. Otherwise, the historian will be ‘drowned’ by
facts to be noted. All this is a basic fact for three reasons:
i) Selection is necessary since ‘facts’ are too many. Consequently, every historian
selects. Question is how does he do it? Moreover, it is not even a question of
selection of facts, for even that assumes that facts are lying before the historian, in
a plate as it were. In reality, the historian has to search for them, and that assumes
some principle of selection.
ii) Second, gathered facts have to be arranged and grouped. Both involve explanation
and causation, motivation and impact. In other words, analysis is basic to history
as a discipline. In reality, except in a very limited sense, a fact becomes a fact only
as a result of a generalisation.
a) For example, a zamindar, or a peasant, or a slave, or a capitalist looks like a
fact, but is the result of a generalisation. It is only after having been analysed
and explained that it can serve as a datum for the historian.
b) Or take census statistics. They look like facts but in reality they are already
the result of generalisations by the persons who decide the headings under
which statistics are to be collected by the census worker.
c) Or take statistical surveys of peasants. How do you determine their class or
even caste? Who is a poor peasant? Who is an agricultural worker? Or,
even, who is a landlord? Census till recent years produced a demand by
many for classification as Brahmins and Rajputs. In U. P. there is a caste
group which insists on being called Lodh Rajputs, but which also declares
itself to be OBC in order to take advantage of reservations for backward
castes.
d) The very noting of a fact or grouping hides a generalisation. To say Brahmin
Tilak (or Bania Gandhi) already involved a historical generalisation. It involved
the view that his being a Brahmin was important for his politics. It involved a
whole theory of motivation as to why people join and lead a movement or
even why and how Indians act in politics. It even leads to the theory of
Brahmin domination of the Indian national movement.
It is important, in this respect, to note in which context is the caste brought in:
political, social, cultural, or ritual. Kashmiri Nehru can refer to his love for Kashmir
or imply that his being Kashmiri had some significance for his politics. Or take an
example from Medieval India. The British referred to medieval period as period
of Muslim rule, implying the generalisation that the religion of the ruler decides the
nature of the rule. But they did not describe their own rule as Christian rule. On
the other hand, describing the same period as feudal or medieval implies a different 9
Understanding History generalisation. We may take another, narrower example. Emphasis in history on
parliamentary speeches would imply that these were the chief determinants of
politics and government policies.
Recorded facts are, in any case, already the products of the generalisation in the
minds of persons who recorded them. This is also true of what and why certain
statistics were gathered. Even today, the facts reported by newspapers are the
result of the generalising minds of the reporters, editors and owners of newspapers.
iii) In any case, as soon as we go beyond names or dates or mere counting,
generalisations come in. Hence, without generalisations one can be a compiler
(though not even that as we have explained earlier). No complex analysis or
interpretation, or even narration is possible without generalisation. Nor is it possible
for a historian to delve deeper than surface phenomenon in understanding events
and institutions without generalisations.
iv) But analysis and causation already involve, in turn, theories or principles of causation.
To quote the philosopher Sydney Hook: ‘Every fact which the historian establishes
presupposes some theoretical construction.’
This has another positive consequence for historians. Even when no new facts are
unearthed, two or more historians can work on the same theme or subject. They
can work on the same material through fresh generalisation. This is particularly
important for historians of the Ancient and Medieval periods. Even in the absence
of new sources and material, fresh approaches and generalisations can produce
fresh research.

1.4 OBJECTIONS TO GENERALISATION


Some people object to generalisations and raise three types of objections:
i) The first objection is based on the notion that facts are to be differentiated from
generalisations and that generalisations should flow out from facts. We have already
answered this objection and pointed out that facts are often made facts through
generalisations.
ii) It is said that every event is unique and possesses an individuality of its own.
According to this view, society is atomistic and follows no uniformity. But, the fact
is that even uniqueness demands comparison. We cannot grasp the unique unless
it is compared with some thing we know. Otherwise the unique is unknowable,
even unthinkable. In any case, a historian is concerned with the relation between
the unique and the general. For example, Indian national revolution is unique but
its uniqueness can be grasped only by comparing it with other known revolutions.
iii) Often the critics really target those generalisations which are a priori in character
and are superimposed on historical reality. These critics are not wrong. Many put
forward a generalisation as an assertion and consider it proved when it has to be
proved. Similarly, many generalisations are inadequately tested. Many are based
on oversimplification of data and relationships and causation. Some generalisations
are plainly stupid. For example, the answer to the question: why study Africa?
Because it is there. Or that some other countries are undergoing military coups,
therefore another country has also to. (By the way, this is different from suggesting
that events in one country may have exercised influence on another). Or that
because imperialism produced a comprador capitalist class, therefore every colonial
country’s capitalist class had to be comprador. Or that since other nationalist
revolutions took to violence, therefore Indian national revolution also had to be
10 violent. Or that since globalisation led to underdevelopment in some countries, it
must lead to the same in all countries. All these objections apply to the unscientific Generalisation
and illogical character of some generalisations or are critiques of the manner in
which they are arrived at.
In fact, the real problem is different and may be delineated as follows:
a) Generalisations should be made explicit so they can be openly debated.
b) The main problem is the level of a generalisation and of kind it is.
c) The degree of validity or tentativeness or ‘truth’ of a generalisation and what kind
of proof is used to validate it.
d) One should study how to make generalisations and learn how to improve one’s
capacity to make interconnections which are better or more authentic and useful
ones (i.e. with greater validity and coverage). In other words, when we say that a
particular historian is a good historian, one means that he makes better connection
and generalisations apart from having technical skill and integrity as a historian.

1.5 ROLE OF GENERALISATIONS


Apart from the function they perform that we have discussed earlier, generalisations
have certain added advantages for the students of history:
i) They serve as the organising principles for his/her data thus resolving a basic problem
for the historian with a mass of untidy facts in his notes not knowing how to put
them in some type of order.
ii) They improve a historian’s perception or ‘broaden his gaze’; they increase his
ability to grasp an ever-increasing area of reality and make more and more complex
interconnections.
iii) They enable the historian to draw inferences and establish chains of causation and
consequence or effect. In other words, they enable him to analyse, interpret and
explain his date.
The five W’s of a historian’s craft are who or what, when, where, how and why.
Direct facts (i.e., low level generalisations) can at the most enable us to answer
who (or what), when and where questions but not how and why questions. The
latter require wider generalisations.
iv) More specifically, generalisations lead the historian to look for new facts and
sources. Quite often new sources can be properly grasped only through new
generalisations. But very often the process is the other way around. In general,
the search for new materials is motivated by new generalisations.
v) Generalisations also enable the historian to establish new connections between
old, known facts. When we say that a historian has thrown new light on old facts,
it invariably means that the historian has used new generalisations to understand
the known facts.
vi) Generalisations help the historian to avoid ‘empiricism’ or ‘literalism’--- that is
taking the sources at their face value or literal meaning. Instead, he is led to
establish their significance and relevance in his narrative. Take, for example, D. N.
Naoroji’s statements on (British) foreign rule and the use of foreign capital over his
lifetime. Without the use of generalisations, the tendency would be to take his
statements at face value and quote them one after other in a chronological order.
Or, the historian can generalise regarding Naoroji’s approach and then see how all
of his statements ‘fit in’ the generalisation. May be the generalisation has to be 11
Understanding History made more complex; may be one has to make separate generalisations for different
stages or phases in his thinking. Or may be, the generalisation has to be made that
there are differences in his theory and practice. Or may be one has to say that
there is general and continuous unsystematic and irregular thinking by him. Then
one can make the generalisation that Naoroji was confused and incoherent. The
latter would, in any case, be the impression of the reader if ‘literalism’ was followed.
On the other hand, generalisation would enable the historian to look at different
options in interpretation; his discussion would be put on a sounder footing.
In Naoroji’s case we may say that he was an admirer of British rule during the
initial period (till early 1870s) and then became critical of British rule and began to
consider it an impediment to economic growth and a cause of India’s poverty.
Similarly, we may point out that he initially favoured the use of foreign capital and
later, after 1873, started opposing its entry. We may also analyse the reason for
his change of views.
Here, we can see the advantages of the use of generalisations, for the mere recitation
of Naoroji’s opinions would not enable us to understand him or to analyse his
economic thinking, it would only amount to compiling or summarising his views.
vii) Generalisations enable a historian to constantly test what he is saying.
a) At the theoretical plane: As soon as one consciously classifies or categorises
or interrelates persons or events, that is, makes generalisations, one can oneself
examine what their meaning or relevance is.
b) As soon as one has made a generalisation, one starts looking for facts which
may contradict it, or looking for ‘the other side’. Without a generalisation
one does not look for facts which might contradict one’s views; in fact, one
may miss contrary facts even when they stare one in the face. This looking
for contrary facts is basic to the historical discipline, though it is often ignored.
To go back to Dadabhai Naoroji’s example, as soon as I have generalised
about his critique of British rule, I have to ask the question: how does he
reconcile this critique with his praise for British rule. Or does he not make an
attempt to do so? If I am merely compiling his statements, I need not look
for the contradiction or its explanation. Similarly, if I generalide about his
attitude to foreign capital, I start looking for contrary instances. If I am
compiling, I need not. Another instance would be Gandhi’s statements on
the relation between religion and politics. As soon as I generalise, I start
looking for any opposite statements as also other statements which throw
light on his statements.
c) In fact, quite often, others have already generalised on an issue or subject,
the historian researching afresh on the issue can make an advance, in the
main or often, only by testing the earlier generalisations with existing or fresh
evidence and thus, constantly, revise or negate or confirm them. The historian’s
task is made easier if he makes his generalisations explicit along with the
generalisations he is testing.
To sum up: Generalisations guide us, they enable us to doubt facts as they appear or as
they have been described by contemporaries or later writers; they suggest new possible
understanding of old facts; they bring out fresh points and views for confirmation,
refutation, further development, further qualification of existing views.
Generalisations help define a student of history’s theme whether in the case of an essay,
a tutorial, a research paper or a book. They enable him to take notes – whether from
12 a book, an article, or a primary source. In fact, a student of history’s essay or thesis has
to be a series of generalisations to be tested, whether he puts them as statements or Generalisation
questions. Generalisations also enable him to find out which of his notes are significant
and relevant to the theme or subject matter of his research.
Generalisations also enable a researcher to react to what he is reading. He can do so
only if he is generalising while he is reading. Generalisations lead to debates among
historians, otherwise the only reaction to each other’s work among them would be to
point out factual mistakes. Generalisations lead historians to pose issues for discussion
and debate and to start processes of fruitful discussion among them. Some would
agree with the generalisations presented in another historian’s work and find new guides
for research and thinking in them. Others would disagree and try to find new and
different explanations for the phenomenon under discussion and would look for different
evidence for their point of view. Generalisations thus promote search for fresh supporting
or countervailing evidence regarding them. We may discuss the case of a paper
presented in a seminar. If it has no generalisations, it provides no ground for discussion.
Participants can at the most refute or add to the facts presented in the paper. The
absence of generalisations also explains the boring character of some of Indian historical
writings. The reader does not have anything to react to them.

1.6 SOURCES OF GENERALISATION


It should be realised in the very beginning that no general rule or standard procedure
exists for deriving generalisations. However, several sources for the purpose do exist.
i) A major source is the previous writings on any subject which often contain different
generalisations.
ii) Another major source consists of other social sciences, for example generalisations
regarding individual behaviour and motivations, mass behaviour or behaviour of
crowds, role of tradition, role of family, caste outlook and behaviour; economic
theory and history; functioning of political systems; social anthropology (especially
important for ancient and medieval history); linguistics; and so on. These sources
of generalisation are especially important in view of this changed nature of historical
discipline in India in the last 50 years or so. History is no longer seen merely in
terms of wars and diplomacy or from the point of view of the upper classes or
ruling groups or males. It now pertains more to study of society, economy, wider
political movements, culture, daily life, suppressed, dominated and marginal groups,
such as women, lower castes and tribal groups, ecology, medicine, sports, etc.
iii) Theories of history, society, culture and politics such as those of Marx, Weber and
Freud are another major source of generalisation.
iv) Historians also derive generalisations from the study of the present. For example,
movements of dalits and other anti-caste groups, and of the tribal people. Similarly
popular discontent and opposition movements can throw up many generalisations
pertaining to the Indian national movement.
v) Many generalisations are derived from life:
a) Common sense is a major source. In fact many historians who do not accept
the need for a conscious process of acquiring generalisations, use their
common sense as their usual source of generalisation.
b) Anther usual source is historian’s personal experience or life-experience. This
experience is, of course, limited by various factors : area of one’s activity;
quality of one’s life; one’s status or position in life as also one’s upbringing.
One example is the tendency of some historians to see political struggle among 13
Understanding History groups, parties and individuals in terms of quarrels in the family or in a
government or company office.
vi) We also derive generalisations from active data collection, that is, from systematic
analysis of the sources. However, this does not so much help in acquiring of
generalisations but the testing of generalisations. In other words, one does not
first gather or take notes and then generalise but rather constantly comment on
evidence of notes even while taking them. The point to be noted is that even while
taking notes, the student or scholar must not be passive recorder but should function
with an active mind.
Thus, the skill to make or generate generalisations is best acquired by having an active
mind, doing everything one learns to make a correction the way a child does. A child
asks even the most stupid-looking questions to make connections, many of which he
may discard later. For example, when meeting a new male person: who is this uncle?
Why is he an uncle? Where is his wife? Why has he not brought his children? Why have
you asked him to eat with us? Why do you address him as sir and not other uncles who
visit us? Why do you serve him a drink and not other uncles? Why is he fair or dark or
why has he got a beard and so on. A child’s questions can open up so many aspects of
a society. A historian has to be like a curious child. Thus if one reacts to the sources,
etc., like a child and asks questions and generalises while reading and noting them, his
thesis would start getting forward.
Thus a generalisation is basically a connection, which can come to one’s mind any time,
especially when one’s mind is ‘full’ of the subject. Many possible connections or
generalisations come into one’s mind when reading, taking notes or thinking on the
subject. Many of them would be given up later, but some will survive and form the
basis of one’s research paper or thesis. They will be stuff of one’s original contribution.
They are what we mean when we say that an historian is original and he has something
new to say.

1.7 HOW TO IMPROVE ONE’S CAPACITY TO


GENERALISE?
Or how does one acquire and improve the capacity to grasp the underlying deeper
connections and not rely on surface or superficial connections? This is perhaps a very
much open area and the answers are both tentative and inadequate. The reader has
enough scope for improvisation.
To start with, the problem may be restated, so that it also provides a part answer.
Having recognised the need for generalisations, this need should become a part of
one’s very approach or mind-set. One should acquire the habit of always looking out
for relationships or linkage between events and things not only when researching but
also in day-to-day life. In other words, one should acquire a generalising and
conceptualising mind.
i) One should acquire and improve the capacity to handle ideas since all generalisations
are grasped as ideas. One should learn to handle ideas, however poorly one may
do so in the beginning. One should constantly conceptualise one’s problems in
place of mere narration. Even while narrating, one should see one’s material as an
illustration of the general, at however low a level.
ii) One should learn to apply logical principles. Logical fallacies such as circular
reasoning have to be avoided. Restatement of a question in a positive form is not
14 an answer to it. For example, to the question why does wood float in water, the
answer that it has the quality to float in water is not an answer; it is merely a positive Generalisation
form of the question. Similarly, the answer to the question why Akbar was a great
ruler because he knew how to rule is no answer.
iii) Language is a historian’s basic tool. One should use clear language in thinking or
writing, even if it is simple. Obscurity in language does not represent clarity or
depth of thought. Postmodernist and structuralist language are prime examples of
such obscurity as C. Wright Mills has pointed out in the case of structuralism.
They do injustice even to the insights that postmodernism and structuralism provide.
The latter two would survive and their contribution would acquire abiding character
only when their practioners learn to express themselves in simpler, easily graspable
language.
iv) One should study and examine in a systematic manner the ‘things’ historians talk
about.
v) Refinement of concepts and generalisations is a perpetual process. Consequently,
discussion around and about them with friends, colleagues and lecturers is very
important. Conversation, in any case, is important in the development and refinement
of ideas, for conversation cannot be carried on without conceptualisation. Two or
more people cannot go on talking merely by narrating facts to each other. For
example, even while discussing a film, people cannot go on citing instances of what
an actor said or did. They must argue around the quality of the dialogue and its
delivery, as also other aspects of the acting in and direction of the film.
vi) One should acquire the quality of critical receptivity to new ideas. One does not
have to accept new ideas simply because they are new. (Ideas are not like new
clothes!) But one should be willing to discuss them, examine them, argue about
them, and accept them if found useful or reject them, as the case may be.
vii) One should be familiar with prior generalisations in one’s area of study. One should
develop the capacity to utilise them after critical examination. Consequently,
historiographic study of past and current generation of historians is absolutely
necessary. Quite often, we do not evolve or generate new generalisations, we
improve on the earlier ones, sometimes even turning them upside down or rather
right side up! This is what almost all historians do. For example, I started by
testing A. R. Desai’s generalisation, in Social Background of Indian Nationalism,
that the Moderate nationalists represented the commercial bourgeoisie of India,
and gradually evolved the generalisation that they represented the emerging industrial
bourgeoisie. Similarly, most Indian historians of the 19th and early 20th centuries
began by examining the generalisations made by the earlier and contemporary British
historians of India.
viii) Comparative history, social sciences and natural and physical sciences are rich
sources for generalisations. One can and should take ‘leads’ or suggestions from
them. Studies of national movements in China, or Indonesia or Algeria can, for
example, enable us to develop generalisations about the national movement in India.
There can, however, be no direct or one-to-one application from the study of other
countries or social sciences, etc. The latter should lie at the back of one’s mind;
they should provide broad hypotheses to be tested and possible connections for
one’s own materials; they should enable one to search for fresh evidence for one’s
own theme of research.
ix) One should acquire better knowledge of the present; one should be in better ‘touch’
with the present and, in fact, should even participate in the making of the present.
The capacity to understand the living would certainly enable one to better understand 15
Understanding History the dead. There is a popular advice which parents give to the children which is
quite relevant in this respect: “You will understand us better when you become a
parent.” In fact we daily borrow from the present to generalise about the past.
Hence, we should improve the quality of our life-experience and what is called
common sense, for often the ‘truths’ of poor common sense can be very
misleading. This is the case for such common examples of poor axioms or common
sense as: there are two sides to a question. This is just not true in many cases. For
example, in case of caste-oppression of the dalits, or oppression of women, or
communalism or anti-Semitism, racialism, colonial oppression, and so on.
If one’s life-experience is narrow, one will have a tendency to view past events,
movements and persons too from a narrow or ‘little-minded’ angle. For example,
one will see the reason for the anti-imperialism of a Surendranath Banerjee, or
Dadabhai Naoroji or Gandhi to lie in personal frustration.
Similarly, one may see questions of political power in terms of family quarrels with
which one is familiar, or of political prestige in terms of personal insult, or of state
policy in terms of personal gratefulness or vengeance or betrayal, or of national
budget in terms of household or kitchen accounts.
One should also develop the capacity to see human beings in all their complexity.
People can live at several levels; for example, they can be very honest at one level,
and dishonest at another. There is the wrong tendency among many to link political
statesmanship with personal virtuous life. It is possible for a political leader to be
very humane in personal life and yet very cruel in political life. Another may not
betray his wife but easily betray his colleagues or vice versa. Victorian moral
outlook has been the bane of many Indian historians of earlier generations.
A historian must, therefore, expand the limits of his/her common sense. He/she
must also lead a fuller life with a variety of experiences and activities. A cloistered
life invariably tends to limit a historian’s vision.
Since no one person can lead a life of multi-experiences, however hard he/she
may try, one way to have a multi-layered understanding of life is through literature.
A good historian has to be fond of fiction and poetry – even of detective and
science fiction.
I may sum up this aspect by saying that better quality of understanding of life
makes for better history and better history makes for better quality of life.
x) One’s position in life certainly influences one’s capacity to generalise and understand
the march of history. Is one, for example, for change or for status quo? And if
one is for change, what type of change? For example, does one believe in the
caste system? Or in male superiority? This does not mean that one’s position in
life would determine one’s historiographic position; but the nature of its influence
will be determined by the extent to which one is aware of the issue.

1.8 SUMMARY
In this Unit we have tried to deal with various aspects of generalisation. Our position is
that generalisation is a very important part of historical work. Although there are many
objections to generalisation, no writing is possible without using general terms and
concepts. These are derived from earlier works and serve as the starting points for the
current work. The generalisation may keep changing as the work progresses. However,
at every stage, the historians have to make generalisations which provide the basis for
understanding their facts and source material.
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Generalisation
1.9 EXERCISES
1) What is a generalisation? Discuss the various types of generalisations?
2) Do you think that there is a need for generalisation in history-writing? Discuss
the various objections to generalisation.
3) What are the different stages in which you may generalise about your work?
What are the sources on the basis of which you can generalise even before
starting empirical work?
4) How can you improve your capacity to generalise?

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