Tham khảo Lịch_sử_xã_hội

  1. Diplomatic dropped from 5% to 3%, economic history from 7% to 5%, and cultural history grew from 14% to 16%. Based on full-time professors in U.S. history departments. Stephen H. Haber, David M. Kennedy, and Stephen D. Krasner, "Brothers under the Skin: Diplomatic History and International Relations," International Security, Vol. 22, No. 1 (Summer, 1997), pp. 34-43 at p. 4 2; online at JSTOR
  2. See "History Online:Teachers of History" Lưu trữ 2017-01-22 tại Wayback Machine accessed 1/21/2014
  3. G. M. Trevelyan (1973). “Introduction”. English Social History: A Survey of Six Centuries from Chaucer to Queen Victoria. Book Club Associates. tr. i. ISBN 978-0-582-48488-7.
  4. Mary Fulbrook (2005). “Introduction: The people's paradox”. The People's State: East German Society from Hitler to Honecker. London: Yale University Press. tr. 17. ISBN 978-0-300-14424-6.
  5. Jürgen Kocka, Industrial Culture and Bourgeois Society: Business, Labor, and Bureaucracy in Modern Germany, 1800-1918 (New York: Berghahn Books, 1999) pp 275-97, at p. 276
  6. See the SSHA website
  7. . See Journal of Social History
  8. Lynn Hunt and Victoria Bonnell, eds., Beyond the Cultural Turn (1999).