What has moving away from the paradigm of consensus history (see Beard) and toward social history through the lenses of gender and race taught historians about the nature of historical interpretation?

What has moving away from the paradigm of consensus history (see Beard) and toward social history through the lenses of gender and race taught historians about the nature of historical interpretation?

Which is a better approach, and why? 2) How do interdisciplinary approaches to history — like cliometrics and quantitative analysis — help historians implement a social history paradigm in their research? How have such numbers-based approaches not helped in the social history paradigm?