Fritz Stern, ed. The Varieties of History , New York, 1956. "Introduction " and pp. 347-370 and The Social Sciences in Historical Study, published by the Social Science Research Council, New York, 1954.
2.
S.R. Gardiner, The History of England I603-42, in 10 volumes, London, 1887.
3.
See G.P. Gooch, History and Historians in the Nineteenth Century, Boston , 1959, and David Jaffin, Eighteenth and Nineteenth Century Historical Interpretations of the Reign of James I of England, New York University, Doctoral Dissertation, 1966, especially II part ii, section j and part iii.
4.
R.G. Collingwood, The Idea of History, New York, 1956, pp. 126-33.
5.
Refer especially to these articles in Hans Meyerhoff , ed. The Philosophy of History in Our Times, New York, 1959
6.
: Wilhelm Dilthey, "The Dream", pp. 37-43
7.
; Benedetto Croce, "History and Chronicle", pp. 44-57
8.
; Carl Becker, "What are Historical Facts", pp. 120-37
9.
; and Raymond Aron, "Relativism in History", pp. 153-61.
10.
Fritz Stern, ed. The Varieties of History , New York, 1956, "Examples from Voltaire to the Present," illustrates the bias of historians.
11.
Sidney Hook's Marx and the Marxists, New York, 1955, traces this point in considerable depth.
12.
Sigmund Freud, Interpretation of Dreams, transl. by Strachey, Allen & Unwin, 3rd edition, London, 1954. — Collected Papers, transl. by Riviere, Hogarth Press, London , 1956-7.
13.
Joseph Roth's novels, Radetzkymarsch and Die Kapuzinergruft, amongst others, contain excellent descriptions of the Viennese society of the late I9th century; so do Arthur Schitzler's well-known Erzählungen und Dramen.