CONCEPT
The Annales School
The French historiographical tradition founded by Marc Bloch and Lucien Febvre in 1929, which rejected narrative political history in favor of
total history grounded in geography, economics, and the
longue durée — the tradition
Braudel led and extended.
The Annales School is the French historiographical tradition that founded modern social and economic history. Taking its name from the journal
Annales d'histoire économique et sociale (founded 1929 by
Marc Bloch and
Lucien Febvre), it rejected the dominant nineteenth-century mode of political-narrative history — kings, battles, treaties — in favor of
histoire totale grounded in geography, climate, demography, economic structures, and the material conditions of daily life. Braudel became the school's second-generation leader and, through the 1949
Mediterranean and the three-volume
Civilization and Capitalism, its most influential practitioner. The school's method —
multiple timescales, attention to
material civilization, suspicion of event-level narrative — is precisely what the AI discourse lacks.
In The You On AI Field Guide
The Annales revolution had three intellectual phases. The first, under Bloch and Febvre (1929–1956), broke with narrative history and established social and economic history as the center of the discipline. The second, under Braudel