Contemporary often refers to persons or their acts or achievements: Hemingway and Fitzgerald, though contemporary, shared few values. Contemporaneous is applied chiefly to events: the rise of industrialism, contemporaneous with the spread of steam power. Coeval refers either to very long periods of time—an era or an eon—or to remote or long ago times: coeval stars, shining for millenia with equal brilliance; coeval with the dawning of civilization.
Coincident means occurring at the same time but without causal or other relationships: prohibition, coincident with the beginning of the s. Words nearby contemporary contemplative , contemplative order , contempo , contemporaneous , contemporaneously , contemporary , contemporize , contempt , contemptible , contempt of Congress , contempt of court.
Words related to contemporary new , present-day , current , instant , latest , mod , now , present , recent , today , attendant , coeval , concomitant , abreast , au courant , contempo , existent , extant , hot off the press , in fashion.
The Economics of Sports Gambling Ep. Dubner August 20, Freakonomics. Sujata Gupta August 14, Science News. Dubner August 6, Freakonomics. In Sweden, scholars have found that FoI has led to what they called 'the emptying of the archive'.
The dawn of the electronic age has been both a boon and a challenge to contemporary historians. Since the mid s documents have been almost exclusively created and stored electronically.
Additionally documents created earlier could also be converted into electronic form. This has meant that such documents could be searched and interrogated more easily and could also be made available on the web.
However, handling substantial quantities of such material can be problematic. For instance, a large number of newspaper sources have been digitised: but reliance on the search mechanisms has not always provided the best results.
Vanessa Chambers, when completing her doctorate here at the Institute of Historical Research IHR , discovered that she had to double check the findings of her electronic searches of The Times with hardcopy indexes because the latter, to her considerable surprise, sometimes yielded better results.
The possibility of interviewing people, of capturing their memories and interrogating them for information, has been a resource available only to historians working on the recent past. The use of oral history has helped to recover the history of those who may not have left written records behind or who were in other ways silent. The history of working-class lives, for example, has been better brought to life by oral history.
However, its use has not been uncontroversial. Because it is a well-known fact that memory is fallible; that people tend to put themselves at the centre of their memories; because people may lie — so, critics say, oral history is inherently flawed.
But such a line of argument misunderstands how historians use — or rather should use — oral history, a sub-discipline in its own right with sophisticated methodologies and enriched by its interdisciplinary links. Interdisciplinary links are important for contemporary historians too. For instance, those interested in political history have to be aware of the work of political scientists; in constitutional development , with legal studies; and in social history , with the work of sociologists, anthropologists and other social scientists.
Interdisciplinarity has allowed contemporary historians to use concepts and theories to enhance their understanding of the recent past. Is contemporary history in a healthy state? If one looks at the IHR's online ' Theses in progress and completed ' the numbers of those doing and who have done what can be broadly defined as contemporary history the website does not acknowledge contemporary history as a distinct discipline at UK higher education institutions has more than doubled since Abraham Lincoln was contemporary with Charles Darwin contemporaneous is more often applied to events than to people.
Contemporary can be confusing because of its slightly different meanings. In everyday use, it generally means simply "modern" or "new". But before the 20th century it instead referred only to things from the same era as certain other things; so, for instance, Jesus was contemporary with the Roman emperors Augustus and Tiberius, and Muhammad was contemporary with Pope Gregory the Great.
And contemporary is also a noun: thus, Jane Austen's contemporaries included Coleridge and Wordsworth, and your own contemporaries were born around the same year that you were.
These example sentences are selected automatically from various online news sources to reflect current usage of the word 'contemporary. Send us feedback. See more words from the same year.
Accessed 11 Nov. More Definitions for contemporary. Nglish: Translation of contemporary for Spanish Speakers.
Britannica English: Translation of contemporary for Arabic Speakers. Subscribe to America's largest dictionary and get thousands more definitions and advanced search—ad free! Log in Sign Up. Save Word.
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