My research paper argues against a famous historian. I feel like I'm picking a fight I can't win.

Augusto

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For my research paper, I'm arguing against an interpretation by a famous historian. Someone whose books are on my professor's syllabus. Someone who basically defined how we think about this topic.

My argument is good. I have evidence. I have logic. I have sources he didn't use. But still. Who am I to argue with him? I'm an undergrad. He's a legend. He's been doing this since before I was born.

Every time I write a sentence that disagrees with him, I want to add a disclaimer. "But of course he's brilliant and I'm probably wrong." My professor told me to stop. Said "scholarship is conversation, not worship. He can handle disagreement."

Easy for her to say. She's a professor. She's part of the conversation. I'm just a student peeking through the door. I'm also scared of my professor's reaction. What if she's personally invested in this historian's work? What if disagreeing with him feels like disagreeing with her? She says it won't. She says good scholars welcome challenge. But still. It's intimidating.

Anyone else argued against established scholars? How do you find the confidence?
 
I love when students engage critically with established work. It means they're thinking, not just absorbing. It means they trust themselves enough to have an opinion.

But here's the key: engage with the argument, not the person.

You're not attacking the historian. You're questioning their interpretation. That's different. That's allowed. That's encouraged.

Be respectful. Be specific. Use evidence. Show where their interpretation falls short and why yours fits better.

If you do that, even historians who disagree will respect the work.
 
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