Feel free not to read this:
I said history could be for the writer or for the reader. Where the 'power' resides rests on:
a. Whether the historian attempts to do a 'rugged reflection" (or whatever the paper said) or to spark revolution. I read Jenkins to be arguing that it is impossible for the historian to appeal to both the conservative and revolutionary reader.
b. The distance between the reader and the historian. Herodotus may be the oldest historian, very famously criticised for being the 'father of lies' and recording an oral tradition of bullshit, but he's important because he contains many 'facts' that no other written source can provide the reader.
c. Herodotus' style, as well, makes it interesting to read. On the other hand, when Thucydides tries to record the Peloponnesian War because it is in his opinion the most important event ever, but neglects aspects of his society and culture, his history can appear bland for some readers.
If we try to understand these early histories, for instance, we must come to understand the historians. Jenkins rephrases the age old question 'what is history' to 'who is history for' because he realises the former cannot be answered. Then i wrote about EH Carr's book 'what is history' and regurgitated a major chunky quote i had only read about 2 mins before the exam and had no idea on how i remembered (about the historian's use of evidence being not the most important thing.) Then I compared Bede to von Ranke based on the fact that despite professing to have his own personal views 'swallowed up' by overwhelming use of evidence, von Ranke like Bede thought it was 'God's will' that Germany be united or that history took the course it took. Linking this back to the source was a bit dubious, but I just wanted to write it...I said in a way, any attempts taken by the historian to be independent of history fail because, as Jenkins puts it, the historian can either serve his own purpose (to write either for revolutionaries or for conservatives) or he can become totally distatched from his work, and decline to write osmething of any value.
THen I restated Foucault's position: gave my view on the point of his works to put in to practice and tell hte untold stories...the nature of history is impossible to determine because there are an unlimited number of histories, but history ceases to exist from the point the event occurred until it is recorded. THen it is bound by language, but the paradox is that the evidence is also bound by language.
Then I went on a final page spiel about how in 1991 Jenkins' world was moving towards our situation in 2005 where researching history is not limited to local archives or documents, but electronic proliferation and duplication has meant the historian runs the risk of becoming overwhelmed, the reader find himself unable to find anywhere to start in his reading of history because the body of evidence is so vast, and the growth of history so the historian's role is to write a readable, work which a reader can engage with to disagree, accpet or learn from.