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Teaching with the Oxford DNB
Below are some further suggestions for using the Oxford DNB, and how three of its key features can contribute to teaching and studying.
- Individual biographies
The Oxford DNB includes entries on more than 56,000 men and women who shaped British history. Biographies are written by specialist historians and scholars and are peer reviewed by a network of external experts and editors at Oxford University.
But what use is biography if you're looking at a theme or topic in historyfor example, the consolidation of the Tudor dynasty, the Cromwellian state, nineteenth-century social reform, or the female suffrage campaign, or equally if you're studying Paradise Lost or First World War poetry?
- everything comes back to people: it was once common for historians to explain the past principally in terms of impersonal systems and movements. Now, however, this approach is combined with greater appreciation of the importance of studying the people who shaped our history, both in terms of leaders but also less familiar figures whose actions were central to historical topicsnot just William I but the barons who accompanied the king to England, not just Cromwell but the major generals who maintained the Republic; not just the Pankhursts but the women who campaigned for reform across the country.
- biographies offer historical context: Oxford DNB entries on well-known figures provide detailed and rounded studies of a person's professional and private life. They offer useful context for your work, even if the principal focus is on a text or an event: for example, what was Emily Brontë's upbringing, and what prompted her to write Wuthering Heights? What lay behind William Gladstone's support of franchise extension; what was his vision for Britain and how did it differ from that of Benjamin Disraeli? What was Neville Chamberlain's attitude to foreign policy and what other issues did he face alongside German expansionism in the late 1930s?
Oxford DNB entries on major figures are important secondary sources in their own right, being both detailed (typically between 10,000 and 30,000 words in length) and written by leading experts in the field. However, entries are easily navigated online, so you can quickly find the relevant section of a biography, providing important context and background information. For example, click here for the section on Elizabeth I's attitude to Mary, queen of Scots in the Oxford DNB biography by Patrick Collinson.
- reputations and historical opinions change: many entries provide a concluding assessment of a person's historical significance and changing posthumous reputation. Since Oxford DNB entries are written by leading scholars, these reviews provide excellent and stimulating perspectives which often distil a lifetime's study. In the Oxford DNB you'll find, Eric Ives on Anne Boleyn and Henry VIII, Kenneth Morgan on David Lloyd George, Rosemary Ashton of George Eliot, Paul Addison on Winston Churchill, Lyndall Gordon on Virginia Woolf, John Morrill on Oliver Cromwell, Roy Foster on W.B. Yeats, Eric Hobsbawm on Karl Marx, and many others.
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- Defining and investigating groups of people in history
In addition to individual biographies, the search facilities of the online Oxford DNB allow you to create groups of people in history. You can search all 56,000 lives to find quickly those who share common attributes, such as place of birth, education, and residence or the same gender, occupation, and religious affiliation. All searches can be combined and further refined. For example (search links require subscriber access):
Use group searching to help with project work
Place and occupation searching make the Oxford DNB an excellent resource for project work by creating sets of historically significant people that may form the basis of your research. There are many types of search you could perform as a starting point for a project. For example:
The Oxford DNB also provides ideas for individual research in subjects other than history. For instance:
- publishers and booksellers working in Jacobean England
- poets and authors writing during the First World War
- people whose portraits were painted by a famous artist, such as Hans Holbein or Joshua Reynolds: what were their backgrounds, how did they know the artist? how does the portrait reflect the sitter's status and profession?
The Oxford DNB also provides a detailed list of primary and secondary sources for each biography. These too can be used to generate project ideas. For example:
- Use the Oxford DNB to locate primary resources and archives near to where you live; then refine your search to learn more about the people who wrote them, maybe in a particular profession: for example
- find local archives that contain eighteenth-century manuscript diaries
- find local libraries with letters and papers by nineteenth-century politicians
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- Quick reference with the Oxford DNB's Themes area: our companion guide to British history
As well as its 56,000 biographies, the online Oxford DNB also includes a 'Themes' area which acts as a handbook to British history, both in the UK and overseas.
If you have subscriber access you can see the full list of Themes, here.
If not, a number of Themes are also available 'On the open shelves' via Free Oxford DNB.
Here are several ways Themes can be used:
- quick fact-checking and problem solving: use the dictionary's 'reference lists' to find authoritative answers to questions that arise when teaching or reading for an essay. For example, who succeeded Gladstone as prime minister in 1894? You'll find the answer in our list of UK prime ministers (with links to full biographies for subscribers)
- well-known historical groups: Themes also include 'reference groups': articles written by leading historians on famous groups in history such as the barons who enforced Magna Carta, the women reformers in the Langham Place Circle, or the Guilty Men who appeased Hitler.
Reference groups explain the membership and activities of a group and provide subscribers with links to members' full biographies for further reading. They're an ideal way to set individuals in the context of those with whom they worked, as well as for learning more about groups you may come across in other secondary sources.
For more free reference groups click here.
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