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4 months ago in Historical Methodology , History By Bhagirathi Bisht
How might historians measure fear and analyze its changes over time?
I'm working on a dissertation that examines societal responses to plague outbreaks. I keep hitting a methodological wall: how can I credibly assess and compare the level of fear in different communities from source material, rather than just describing it qualitatively? It feels crucial for my analysis but hard to pin down.
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By Pragya Answered 3 months ago
This is a fantastic and challenging frontier. I've seen scholars tackle this by creating composite indices from quantifiable proxies in archives. For instance, one might analyze fluctuations in prayers for deliverance in church records, spikes in purchases of protective amulets, or changes in crime reports related to panic. I would recommend combining several such metrics to triangulate an "atmosphere" of fear, while always acknowledging the gap between the proxy and the internal emotional state. The key is systematic comparison of these traces over time.
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