482 results on '"Historical narratives"'
Search Results
2. Caffeinated memories: The creation of historical narratives as public goods in the Colombian coffee industry.
- Author
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Bucheli, Marcelo and Sáenz, Luis Felipe
- Subjects
COFFEE growers ,COFFEE industry ,PUBLIC goods ,COMMON good ,COLLECTIVE memory - Abstract
We study the process by which an organisation creates a historical narrative about itself as a strategy to legitimise the role it plays in a particular society. By using the concept of 'public good' as our analytical lens, we show that when the organisation creates a narrative that coincides with that of the nation-state, this poses enormous challenges to the organisation's efforts to control how and by whom this narrative is used. This is because anyone belonging to the nation-state can legitimately make use of that narrative. Therefore, the boundary conditions that permit other actors to use these historical narratives are delimited by those able to define who belongs to the nation-state and who does not. We illustrate our argument with the rhetorical strategies developed by Colombia's Coffee Growers Federation (FNCC) between 1927 and 2013. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
- Full Text
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3. Difficult histories and the 'problem' of sentimentality: a case study in an Argentinian university.
- Author
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Porto, Melina and Zembylas, Michalinos
- Subjects
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HIGHER education , *AFFECT (Psychology) , *SENTIMENT analysis , *STUDENT engagement , *SEMIOTICS - Abstract
In this article we address the problem of sentimentality in teaching and learning difficult histories in higher education. While sentimentality has been widely theorised, empirical research is scarce. Here we contribute an empirical investigation describing how university students in an Argentinian setting engaged with histories of loss, death, and suffering through specific pedagogical activities in ways that minimised the risks of 'empty sentimentality'. These tasks fostered students' use of linguistic and non-linguistic (artistic, semiotic) means of meaning-making in connection with difficult histories and enabled deeper emotional engagement. The study shows that the creation of critical affective spaces in the classroom cultivated students' responsibility for engaging in transformative action. We suggest that educators need to explicitly challenge the often moralising and self-indulgent character of teaching and learning difficult histories, as this character is constitutive of the very sentimentality with which pedagogical practice is so frequently charged. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Mining the past: The case for historical narratives in global justice theorizing.
- Author
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Williams, Huw L
- Subjects
JUSTICE ,CULTURAL studies ,NARRATIVES ,POLITICAL change ,POLITICAL philosophy - Abstract
Debates on global justice, it is claimed, can be enriched in important ways by more explicitly historicizing our approach and using historical narratives, stories and debates to expand our conceptual vocabulary and theoretical purview. The claim is illustrated through a specific analysis of Paul Robeson's relationship with the Welsh Miners. It is argued such a historical turn, grounded in a wider interdisciplinary engagement with subjects such as cultural studies may see at least three key benefits accrue in terms of our understanding of the field. Firstly, it can uncover philosophical and theoretical ideas and alternatives so far unconsidered; secondly, it can generate a shift in the empirical frame that accounts for and seeks to identify means for "real world" political change; lastly, it should encourage us to question the in/out dichotomy at the heart of the western debate, which projects global injustice as being "out there." [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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5. Caught Between a Rock and a Ludic Place: Geography for Non-geographers via Games
- Author
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Champion, Erik, Koutsopoulos, Kostis C., Series Editor, Miguel González, Rafael De, Series Editor, Schmeinck, Daniela, Series Editor, Morawski, Michael, editor, and Wolff-Seidel, Sebastian, editor
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- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Struggles of Indian Indentured Women During the Indenture System in Fiji
- Author
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Nath, Vandana Vikashni, Chaudhary, Priyanka, editor, and Singh, Neha, editor
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- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. Why Ne Win’s Burmanization Policies Are Still Important Sixty Years Later: The Burmese Burden
- Author
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Eh Htoo, Saw, Waters, Tony, Eh Htoo, Saw, and Waters, Tony
- Published
- 2024
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8. الجذور الفكرية للفتوح العربية الاسلامية في كتاب الفتوح العربية للمستشرق هيو كينيدي.
- Author
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رزاق حسين عبد معي and عمار محمد يونس
- Abstract
Copyright of Magazine of Historical Studies & Archaeology is the property of Republic of Iraq Ministry of Higher Education & Scientific Research (MOHESR) and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2024
9. Ficción y medios tecnológicos en la construcción cultural de personajes históricos. Un estudio con profesores en formación.
- Author
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Martín-Antón, Javier, Pérez-Fernández, Francisco, Valdés-González, Aránzazu, and Fernández-Alonso, Rubén
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HISTORICAL literacy ,HISTORICAL source material ,TEACHER training ,CRITICAL thinking ,INFORMATION resources - Abstract
Copyright of Revista Electrónica Interuniversitaria De Formación del Profesorado is the property of Asociacion Universitaria de Formacion del Profesorado (AUFOP) and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
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- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. Unveiling histories: navigating ideological constructs and cultural memories in the contemporary art of Iran.
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Keshmirshekan, Hamid
- Subjects
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IRANIAN art , *CULTURAL identity , *21ST century art , *INTERTEXTUALITY , *ART history - Abstract
This special issue explores the multifaceted landscape of the contemporary art of Iran, unveiling diverse approaches to historical narratives and cultural memory while challenging the concept of a 'correct history.' Focused on the post-revolutionary period, the essays scrutinise how Iranian artists navigate and contest an ideologically structured history imposed by the political system. This structured history, often divergent from creative historical understanding, prioritises abstract ideals and diminishes alternative perspectives. Central questions explored include how contemporary Iranian artists position themselves in relation to history and cultural memory, manifesting their way of looking in their works. Examining strategies such as irony, fantasy, intertextuality and deconstruction, these artists engage in critical re-tellings of a past that persists in haunting the present. Their creations reflect on the self by narrating history, contributing to the ongoing debate on historical narratives. The essays investigate how contemporary art practices in Iran grapple with social, cultural and political issues, including censorship, transforming challenges into critical tools that give rise to a multi-faceted aesthetics of resistance. The issue sheds light on these alternative approaches and elaborates on the broader discourse on artistic engagement with historical and socio-political contexts. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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11. Identifying stories of 'us': A mixed‐method analysis of the meaning, contents and associations of national narratives constructed by Americans.
- Author
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Choi, Sarah Y. and Liu, James H.
- Subjects
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NATIONAL health services , *RESEARCH funding , *RESEARCH methodology evaluation , *QUESTIONNAIRES , *CULTURE , *AGE distribution , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *EXPERIENCE , *EXPERIMENTAL design , *SOCIAL skills , *RESEARCH methodology - Abstract
How do lay individuals reconstruct, appropriate or resist culturally sanctioned narratives about their nation's past? The current study examined this question through an open‐ended survey administered to a US sample, stratified by age and gender (N = 399). We identified three major historical narratives that were popular among Americans. Specifically, we identified positive narratives of the nation's progress over time and glorifying narratives of American exceptionalism, alongside a popular counter‐narrative that was critical of the nation as reproducing ongoing cycles of injustice. Representations of national origins were significantly more salient for the narratives of Progress and Glorification, while more recent and lived events were salient for Critical narratives. Progress and Critical narratives were both associated with a constructive orientation to national identity, while Glorifying narratives were associated with blind patriotism. Critical and Glorifying narratives were consistently opposed in their associated political attitudes and in their patterns of endorsement across party affiliations. Overall, it appeared that narratives of progress were most popular and least polarised. We discuss the implications of these findings through the perspective that narratives provide dynamic content for identity construction as well as the means for articulating resistance to hegemony within specific historical and political contexts. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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12. Forget and rewrite: Unearthing the history of Manshiya/Neve Shalom.
- Author
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Aleksandrowicz, Or
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- 2024
- Full Text
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13. Towards stronger national unity: statist ideas in Estonian nationalism during the "Era of Silence" (1934–1940).
- Author
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Veski, Liisi
- Subjects
POLITICAL elites ,AUTHORITARIANISM ,STATE, The ,DEMOCRACY - Abstract
This article examines how the political elites of the Estonian authoritarian regime, established in 1934, imagined and reframed the state-nation relationship, and what the origins of their thinking were. It will also consider how these ideas were instrumentalized to legitimize the new authoritarian order. The argument is that the new regime was essentially statist and 'nationalizing' in character. The relationship between the state, the nation, and the individual remained, however, under discussion among the political elites. Not entirely uniform in their attitudes toward authoritarianism, they sought to define a new illiberal form of democracy, where individual autonomy would be in principle respected but, if necessary, restricted for the national interests [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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14. A cinematic soap opera: The development of cinematography as an advertising and promotional tool in Lever Brothers Limited.
- Author
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Strickland, Jeannette
- Abstract
In his history of Unilever, Charles Wilson stated that cinema advertising was not part of the company's marketing strategy until the late 1930s. However, despite the paucity of surviving archival sources, recent research has proved that Lever Brothers was engaged with the new medium of cinematography from its earliest days and that the practice continued up to and after the formation of Unilever in 1930. William Lever is renowned for his innovative approach to advertising and marketing, and as a pioneer of creating brand identity, but he was also one of the first British businessmen to recognise the value of film as a marketing tool. This article will argue that Lever Brothers was active in the use of cinematography from the mid-1890s and that it played a significant role in the company's marketing campaigns. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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15. The Yom Kippur War or the Kishinev Pogrom? On the Narrativization of Violence, History and Fate.
- Author
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Ury, Scott
- Subjects
- *
ISRAEL-Arab War, 1973 , *COLLECTIVE memory , *GENOCIDE , *ANTISEMITISM , *POGROMS , *VIOLENCE , *ISRAEL-Arab War, 1967 , *ISRAEL-Hamas War, 2023- - Abstract
This text explores the different narrative frameworks that have emerged in Israeli society and Jewish history to understand the conflict between Israel and Hamas. One narrative compares the conflict to the Yom Kippur War and suggests that negotiation and resolution are possible. Another narrative frames the conflict as a continuation of historical anti-Jewish violence and emphasizes the role of antisemitism. These narratives shape the understanding of the conflict and reinforce existing ideas about Jewish history and Israeli society. Alternative narratives that focus on the experiences of Palestinian civilians are often marginalized, and these narratives are used to define who belongs and who is excluded. [Extracted from the article]
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- 2024
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16. ISTORIJSKI NARATIVI I ETNIČKI IDENTITET: SREDNJOŠKOLCI O NATO BOMBARDOVANJU SRJ 1999. GODINE.
- Author
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Jevtić, Miloš, Lukić, Petar, and Stanković, Biljana
- Abstract
Copyright of Sociologija/Sociology: Journal of Sociology, Social Psychology & Social Anthropology is the property of MOD International and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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17. HISTORICAL AND CULTURAL DIPLOMACY'S INFLUENCE ON TRADE RELATIONS: A COMPARATIVE REVIEW OF NIGERIA AND THE U.S. INTERACTIONS.
- Author
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Ikwue, Uneku, John-Ladega, Adesola Adepeju, Abioye, Kehinde Mobolaji, Abdul, Adekunle Abiola, Alabi, Ayoola Maxwell, and Daraojimba, Chibuike
- Subjects
CULTURAL diplomacy ,INTERNATIONAL economic relations ,CULTURAL relations ,NARRATIVES - Abstract
This study embarks on a critical exploration of the intricate dynamics shaping Nigeria-U.S. relations, with a keen focus on the influence of historical narratives and cultural diplomacy on trade interactions. Utilizing a systematic literature review methodology, the research meticulously analyzed a plethora of peer-reviewed articles, governmental reports, and policy documents, adopting a multidisciplinary approach to garner a comprehensive understanding of the topic. The analysis delineated the complex interplay between historical narratives, cultural diplomacy, and economic partnerships, revealing a rich tapestry of interactions that has evolved over the years. This underscored the potential of cultural diplomacy as a potent tool in fostering economic relations and highlighted the need for a reevaluation of existing economic policies to nurture more equitable partnerships. Conclusively, this study advocates for deep-seated engagement grounded in mutual respect and understanding, fostering a future characterized by collaborative growth and innovation. It recommends the amplification of cultural exchange initiatives and the fostering of technological synergies to navigate the demands of a rapidly evolving global landscape, thereby paving the way for a fruitful and harmonious future in Nigeria--US relations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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18. PICTURING HISTORICAL ABSENCES: A CONVERSATION WITH JOANA HADJITHOMAS & KHALIL JOREIGE.
- Author
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CATARINA PINHO, ANA and VALLS BOFILL, AROLA
- Subjects
CRITICAL thinking ,ARTISTIC creation ,COLLECTIVE memory ,ARCHIVAL materials ,LEBANESE - Abstract
In this interview, Lebanese artists Joana Hadjithomas and Khalil Joreige discuss their artistic practice on historical narratives and memory, particularly regarding their approach to the wars in Lebanon. By critically appropriating and scrutinizing archival materials, their work challenges dominant narratives, revealing historical absences that would otherwise be forgotten. Delving into the complexities of the past, the artists explore how history shapes identity and informs contemporary discourse. Through this dialogue, Hadjithomas and Joreige reflect on their artistic process and the transformative potential of art to foster critical reflection and promote more just and compassionate futures. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
19. Distorting the Past: A Narrative Review of Examples of History Crafting in Afghanistan's Secondary School History Textbooks (2001-2021).
- Author
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Eslami, Rohollah and Hasin, Basir Ahmad
- Subjects
HISTORY textbooks ,SECONDARY schools ,HISTORIOGRAPHY ,NATIONALISM ,IDEOLOGY ,DISCOURSE analysis - Abstract
This paper investigates the intricacies of crafting historical narratives within secondary school textbooks in Afghanistan throughout the past century. Employing critical discourse analysis, the study scrutinizes five compelling examples illuminating the complex interplay between historiography, political ideologies, and artistic subjectivity in shaping students' conception of national identity. The first case centers on the invention of fictional historical figures like Amir Kror that link Afghan lineage to powerful dynasties, but lack scholarly rigor and threaten social cohesion. Second, the analysis explores identity distortions woven into textbook images that portray figures like Genghis Khan with distinctly Afghan features, blurring historical accuracy. Third, it highlights methodological limitations and potential regional biases that cloud academic debates on the origins of dynasties like the Kartids. Fourth, the construction of demographic averages regarding ethnicity and religion without empirical basis raises concerns about perpetuating damaging stereotypes. Finally, the ubiquitous name "Afghanistan" itself reveals imbalanced emphases on particular eras, shaping modern conceptions of nationhood. Collectively, these five examples underscore the need for responsible scholarship and factual precision in history education to foster authentic engagement with Afghanistan's rich and diverse heritage. As the curriculum shapes students' notions of identity and selfhood, commitment to academic accountability and balanced historiography becomes essential to nurturing inclusive discourse and national cohesion. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
- Full Text
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20. Dekomunizacja i przemianowywanie ulic w Polsce - próba wykorzystania analizy danych ilościowych w badaniach pamięcioznawczych.
- Author
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RÓŻYCKI, Bartłomiej and REDER-ZIRKELBACH, Katrin
- Abstract
Copyright of Historia i Polityka is the property of Nicolaus Copernicus University in Torun and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. The politicisation of historical memory on Twitter: "Positive antisemitism" in the Holocaust debate in Poland.
- Author
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Trzoss, Adrian, Werner, Wiktor, Kleist, Cyprian, Kwiatkowska-Moskalewicz, Katarzyna, and Moskalewicz, Marcin
- Subjects
- *
COLLECTIVE memory , *ANTISEMITISM , *HOLOCAUST, 1939-1945 , *POLITICAL parties - Abstract
Political controversies concerning the memory of historical events have adapted to the digital specificity of Twitter and are currently growing in significance. This study investigates the sentiment bias of a memory war between two major Polish political parties, the currently ruling conservative Law and Justice (PiS) party and Civic Platform (PO), the main opposition party, concerning Polish-Jewish relations, and especially the Holocaust. Totally, 23699 PO Tweets and 29,441 PiS Tweets from 2015 to 2019 were collected, out of which, 241 concerning memory war were sampled with a lexicon-based approach. Sentiment was analysed using tweet-based consensual coding with an ordinal five-point scale and automated word-based coding with a three-point scale. PiS tweets had more positive sentiment regarding the memory of the Holocaust and Jewish legacy in Poland. The final hermeneutical analysis showed that the rulling party narratives were aimed appropriation of collective memory and "Polonizing" the Holocaust, and that the positive sentiment was a function of 'positive anti-Semitism'. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
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22. The Kalevala and Finland's Atlantean Past
- Author
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Ossi Korpi
- Subjects
Theosophy ,Esotericism ,Kalevala ,Nationalism ,Historical narratives ,Philosophy. Psychology. Religion ,Religions. Mythology. Rationalism ,BL1-2790 ,Religion (General) ,BL1-50 - Abstract
Nationalistic interpretations of history were prevalent in Finland until the Second World War. A unifying past for Finns was sought in antiquity, often influenced by interpretations of the Kalevala, regarded as the Finnish national epic. The Kalevala also inspired writers in the Theosophical Society, who promoted various alternative views of humanity’s past. In this article, I analyse the late 1930s writings of Wilho “Willie” Angervo (1875–1938), a medical colonel and author who had a central role in the Finnish Order of the Star in the East and the Theosophical Society in his time. Inspired by the Kalevala, Angervo traced the origins of the Finns to the lost continent of Atlantis and aimed to revitalize the pre-Christian “faith of the forefathers”. Dialogical narrative analysis is employed to explore how Angervo portrayed the Finns’ past, combining Theosophical and nationalistic ideas to construct an ideal Finnishness. I argue that Angervo utilized the Theosophical timeline and concepts to construct a spiritually oriented national narrative for the Finns that would surpass any polit-ical quarrels and challenge both the Church and more military-oriented nationalism.
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- 2024
- Full Text
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23. Deportations from Macedonia and their Place in Bulgarian-Macedonian Relationships
- Author
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Stefan Detchev
- Subjects
Bulgarian-Macedonian relations ,Holocaust ,historical narratives ,antisemitism ,Bulgarian nationalism ,Macedonian nationalism ,Social Sciences - Abstract
The proposed article reveals how the very deportation of Jews from Macedonia in March 1943 is intertwined and strongly depends on the ideas and memory in the two neighboring countries - the Republic of Bulgaria and the Republic of North Macedonia - for the period of 1941-1944, the Holocaust itself, the subsequent time of communist rule, and the transition period after late 1980s and the beginning of 1990s. It shows how a peculiar beginning of the entry of the problem of the deportation of the Jews into the diplomatic quarrel along the Sofia-Skopje axis appeared in 1998. The following first decade of the new 21st century was distinguished by the strong and tangible presence of various Jewish worlds and narratives about the Jews of Macedonia and the old borders of Bulgaria during the Second World War. As a result the narratives about the deportation of Macedonian Jews and the salvation of Bulgarian ones fight each other. In recent years the international Jewish community, more often indirectly than directly, has played an important role in rounding, smoothing and refining both positions - the Bulgarian and the Macedonian one – with necessary corrections in both narratives. Author(s): Stefan Detchev Title (English): Deportations from Macedonia and their Place in Bulgarian-Macedonian Relationships Journal Reference: Identities: Journal for Politics, Gender and Culture, Vol. 20, No. 1-2 (2023). Publisher: Institute of Social Sciences and Humanities - Skopje Page Range: 92-103 Page Count: 12 Citation (English): Stefan Detchev, "Deportations from Macedonia and their Place in Bulgarian-Macedonian Relationships,” Identities: Journal for Politics, Gender and Culture, Vol. 20, No. 1-2 (2023): 92-103.
- Published
- 2023
24. JUGUETES ARQUITECTÓNICOS: LA CONSTRUCCIÓN LÚDICA DE LA ARQUITECTURA.
- Author
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Ginoulhiac, Marco
- Subjects
ARCHITECTURAL design ,STUDENT interests ,CREATIVE ability ,ADULTS ,TOYS - Abstract
Copyright of Revista Proyecto, Progreso, Arquitectura is the property of Proyecto, Progreso, Arquitectura and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. Reconstructing the 'Reconquista': Students' negotiation of a Spanish master narrative.
- Author
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van Alphen, Floor and Wagoner, Brady
- Abstract
To analyse the different appropriations of the 'Reconquest' narrative schema in Spanish collective memory, this paper proposes a study following Bartlett's method of repeated reproduction. Students from different backgrounds, within and outside of Spain, were presented historical narratives from less familiar perspectives than the traditional nationalist perspective. One week and again several months later they were asked to reproduce it. Over time their reconstructions tend to be progressively conventionalised, fitting it to the form of the traditional national historical narrative familiar to them. However, students simultaneously reflect on the term 'Reconquest' and its narrative schema. They turn around upon this schema, negotiate critical narrative elements or personalise the narrative they had read. These findings encourage further research into the complexity of schematic reconstructions and, ultimately, the reconstruction of schemas through reflection from other points of view. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Reconquest 2.0: the Spanish far right and the mobilization of historical memory during the 2019 elections.
- Author
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Esteve-Del-Valle, Marc and Costa López, Julia
- Subjects
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ELECTIONS , *TREND setters , *POLITICAL parties , *MEDIEVALISM , *POLITICAL elites , *COLLECTIVE memory - Abstract
This paper brings together the literature on far right parties, medievalism and opinion leadership in order to more closely interrogate the memory politics of the far right. We address two broad questions: what does the mobilization of distant-past events do in far right discourse? And how do these memories circulate online? We unpack one specific case study: the mobilization of the topic 'La Reconquista' (The Reconquest) among the computer-mediated networks of one Europe's newest national-populist parties: Spain's VOX. First, we show three strategies through which the Reconquest trope reproduced a conservative historiography that creates a transhistorical, exclusionary and Catholic Spanish nation: the creation of memory sites, the glorification of heroes and a specifically antagonistic memory. Second, we show that the one-word nature of the historical narrative, through its Twitter circulation, gave it a crucial ability to mobilize in the context of an election. Finally, drawing from opinion leader theory we show how these Reconquest narratives were put forward by traditional elite actors such as political parties and newspapers, but relied on the role of ordinary citizens to spread and circulate. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
- Full Text
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27. 《希伯來聖經》中祭司文本歷史敘事的帝國 想象.
- Author
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姜振帥
- Abstract
The concept of “empire” is of great significance in the history of the Hebrew Bible Development. It influenced the development and formation of various narrative traditions in the Hebrew Bible in different ways, in different historical periods. The Priestly texts, through the themes of “world history”, “ancestral narrative”, and the “Exodus tradition”, appropriate the concepts of “nation”, “land”, and “covenant” which are related to this imperial ideology and discourse, with its imperial imagination. On the one hand, the Priestly texts indicate a realistic acceptance of the rule of the Persian empire in terms of monotheism within the context of theocracy; on the other hand, in the process of dialogue with different traditions, the Priestly texts endow the concept of “empire” with new connotations that are important for the history of ancient Israel in the postmonarchic period. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
28. The AECT Archives: Elusive Primary Sources, and Where to Find Them.
- Author
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Clark-Stallkamp, Rebecca and Ames, Matthew
- Subjects
- *
HISTORY of archives , *HISTORIC preservation , *ARCHIVES , *EYEWITNESS accounts , *HISTORICAL source material - Abstract
Primary sources are the foundations of historical research because they are artifacts representing first-hand accounts or connections to the event, time, or place being investigated. The reality is that many IDT researchers do not have training in historical source analysis, nor do many researchers know where to find primary sources in the field of IDT, or how to conduct historical research if interested. Thus, this article retraces the history of the Association for Educational Communication and Technology's archive, and reveals where primary sources are located. The article details the history of the AECT archive to understand its significance in research. Next, a description on how to begin an archival visit, how archives function, and how to research within the archive is given – including examples. Last, the authors discuss the importance of historical archive preservation and research to the field of IDT. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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- View/download PDF
29. The influence of multiperspectivity in history texts on students' representations of a historical event.
- Author
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Kropman, Marc, van Drie, Jannet, and van Boxtel, Carla
- Subjects
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HISTORY students , *HISTORY education , *HISTORY textbooks , *STUDENT attitudes , *TEXTBOOKS , *ELECTRONIC textbooks , *HISTORIOGRAPHY , *INTERNATIONAL conflict - Abstract
School history textbook narratives of a nation's past often present limited perspectives, which may impede the aim of teaching history from multiple perspectives. Less is known about the influence of including multiple perspectives on students' representations of the past. This study examines the extent to which students include multiple perspectives when processing a schoolbook text that includes multiple perspectives compared to a schoolbook history text containing fewer perspectives. Tenth grade students (N = 104) in four schools were randomly assigned to read one of two texts on the Dutch Revolt and asked to make a summary. Multiperspectivity was analysed through the representation of actors, aspects of scale, dimensions and historiography. The students working with the text having high multiperspectivity showed more perspectives in their representations. In the summaries, these students included significantly more perspectives than did the students using the text with fewer perspectives. Moreover, these students' representations of the main actors were more nuanced. The students using the text with high multiperspectivity situated the conflict in a broader international context and integrated more historiographical dimensions. The insights generated by these outcomes emphasize the important role of textbooks when aiming to teach history from multiple perspectives. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. A ‘forgotten’ whakapapa: historical narratives of Māori and closed adoption
- Author
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Annabel Ahuriri-Driscoll, Denise Blake, Helen Potter, Kim McBreen, and Ani Mikaere
- Subjects
Adoption ,Māori ,settler colonialism ,assimilation ,historical narratives ,Social Sciences - Abstract
ABSTRACTThe era of closed stranger adoption is a significant part of Aotearoa New Zealand’s social and colonial history; some 80,000 children were legally adopted between the years 1955–1985. Māori children constituted a considerable proportion of these legal adoptions, although little attention has been given to their experiences. The relative silence surrounding this phenomenon exists alongside narratives of colonisation and a professed abhorrence by Māori to closed adoption practice, producing a narrative discrepancy. This article aims to understand and account for some of the discrepancies in public narratives by providing an accurate historical account of engagement with the 1955 Adoption Act and its 1962 amendments from a Māori perspective, and unpacking the legal, political, social and cultural aspects from a historical experience. The complexities and nuances of settler colonialism are highlighted, as well as the effects for Māori adoptees of not being publicly and historically narrated – forgotten subjects.Glossary of Māori words: Aotearoa: the Māori name for New Zealand; hapū: kinship group, clan, sub-tribe; iwi: kinship grouping, tribe; korero: to tell, say, speak, talk (verb); speech, narrative, story, discussion (noun); Māori: normal, usual, natural, common or ordinary, used to refer to indigenous New Zealanders; mokopuna: grandchild/grandchildren, descendant; Ngāpuhi: the people or tribal grouping of the Northland region; Pākehā: New Zealanders of European origin; tamariki: child/children; Te Tiriti o Waitangi: the Māori text of the Treaty of Waitangi, the founding document which enabled British settlement of Aotearoa; tikanga: culture, customs, traditions; whakapapa: genealogy, lineage, descent (noun); to place in layers (verb); whanau: family; whanaungatanga: relationship, kinship; whāngai: customary child placement, literal meaning to feed, nourish or nurture
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- 2023
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31. التحليل التاريخي وتوظيف التقنيات الحديثة في دراسة روايات مصادر التاريخ االسالمي.
- Author
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د. خالد إسماعيل ن
- Subjects
- *
HISTORY of Islam , *HISTORIOGRAPHY , *HISTORICAL source material , *HISTORICAL analysis , *ISLAMIC studies - Abstract
This study seeks to introduce one of the most important foundations of the historical research method, which represents the basis and pillar of the historical study, which is the historical analysis and criticism of historical texts in the sources of Islamic history and to clarify its nature, origin, development, controls and its importance in reaching the historical truth and the employment and use of modern technologies and electronic education in the implementation of historical analysis and criticism, The study sheds light on the problematic of historical analysis and criticism, its nature and importance, and the extent of the ability to use modern technologies, The research focused on clarifying the meaning of history, texts and historical narratives, defining the tasks of the historian, and knowing the methods and controls of Muslim historians in dealing with historical narratives, and the impact of this on reaching the historical truth in historical studies in general and Islamic history in particular. The essence of this study and its importance lies in focusing on historical analysis and criticism and clarifying its controls, foundations and importance in reaching the historical truth and the extent of the ability to use and employ modern techniques in shortening the time and effort of researchers in Islamic history, One of the most important goals that the researcher has reached is to know how to implement and complete the historical analysis of texts in Islamic history according to the foundations of the scientific research method, and to try to apply the tools and means of modern technologies in facilitating the historical study, and to include all of this in e-learning to help students and researchers in carrying out studies in Islamic history. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
32. A 'forgotten' whakapapa: historical narratives of Māori and closed adoption.
- Author
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Ahuriri-Driscoll, Annabel, Blake, Denise, Potter, Helen, McBreen, Kim, and Mikaere, Ani
- Subjects
ADOPTION ,IMPERIALISM - Abstract
The era of closed stranger adoption is a significant part of Aotearoa New Zealand's social and colonial history; some 80,000 children were legally adopted between the years 1955–1985. Māori children constituted a considerable proportion of these legal adoptions, although little attention has been given to their experiences. The relative silence surrounding this phenomenon exists alongside narratives of colonisation and a professed abhorrence by Māori to closed adoption practice, producing a narrative discrepancy. This article aims to understand and account for some of the discrepancies in public narratives by providing an accurate historical account of engagement with the 1955 Adoption Act and its 1962 amendments from a Māori perspective, and unpacking the legal, political, social and cultural aspects from a historical experience. The complexities and nuances of settler colonialism are highlighted, as well as the effects for Māori adoptees of not being publicly and historically narrated – forgotten subjects. Glossary of Māori words: Aotearoa: the Māori name for New Zealand; hapū: kinship group, clan, sub-tribe; iwi: kinship grouping, tribe; korero: to tell, say, speak, talk (verb); speech, narrative, story, discussion (noun); Māori: normal, usual, natural, common or ordinary, used to refer to indigenous New Zealanders; mokopuna: grandchild/grandchildren, descendant; Ngāpuhi: the people or tribal grouping of the Northland region; Pākehā: New Zealanders of European origin; tamariki: child/children; Te Tiriti o Waitangi: the Māori text of the Treaty of Waitangi, the founding document which enabled British settlement of Aotearoa; tikanga: culture, customs, traditions; whakapapa: genealogy, lineage, descent (noun); to place in layers (verb); whanau: family; whanaungatanga: relationship, kinship; whāngai: customary child placement, literal meaning to feed, nourish or nurture [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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33. Two Tales of a Nation: Ulus as a Site of Competing Historical Narratives
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Uğur-Çinar, Meral, author
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- 2024
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34. The Discursive Construction of National Identity in Prescribed History Textbooks
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Zajda, Joseph, Zajda, Joseph, Series Editor, Arnove, Robert, Editorial Board Member, Brock-Utne, Birgit, Editorial Board Member, Carnoy, Martin, Editorial Board Member, Davies, Lyn, Editorial Board Member, Dervin, Fred, Editorial Board Member, Evans, Karen, Editorial Board Member, Freeman, Kassie, Editorial Board Member, Geo-JaJa, MacLeans, Editorial Board Member, Kazamias, Andreas, Editorial Board Member, Limage, Leslie, Editorial Board Member, Majhanovich, Susan, Editorial Board Member, Mollis, Marcella, Editorial Board Member, Nikandrov, Nikolai, Editorial Board Member, Rust, Val, Editorial Board Member, Akkari, Abdeljalil, Advisory Editor, Avalos, Beatrice, Advisory Editor, Biraimah, Karen, Advisory Editor, Chapman, David, Advisory Editor, Cheng, Sheng Yao, Advisory Editor, Gamage, David, Editorial Board Member, Ginsburg, Mark, Advisory Editor, Iram, Yaacov, Advisory Editor, Levin, Henry, Advisory Editor, McGinn, Noel, Advisory Editor, Phillips, David, Advisory Editor, Postglione, Gerald, Advisory Editor, Ross, Heidi, Advisory Editor, Sabour, M’hammed, Advisory Editor, Schriewer, Jurgen, Advisory Editor, Stacki, Sandra, Advisory Editor, Stromquist, Nelly, Advisory Editor, Torres, Carlos, Advisory Editor, Willis, David, Advisory Editor, Davidovitch, Nitza, editor, and Majhanovich, Suzanne, editor
- Published
- 2022
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35. History and Utopian Thinking in the Era of the Anthropocene
- Author
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Brzeziński, Dariusz, Linkov, Igor, Series Editor, Keisler, Jeffrey, Series Editor, Lambert, James H., Series Editor, Rui Figueira, Jose, Series Editor, Izdebski, Adam, editor, Haldon, John, editor, and Filipkowski, Piotr, editor
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
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36. Ideological Perspectives in Translated Museum Discourses
- Author
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Antoniou, Eleftherios, Li, Defeng, Series Editor, Sidiropoulou, Maria, editor, and Borisova, Tatiana, editor
- Published
- 2022
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37. Recognition, Literature, and Social Dependence: An Inquiry into the Work of Bourdieu und Elias
- Author
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Fluck, Winfried, Franke, Astrid, editor, Mueller, Stefanie, editor, and Sarkowsky, Katja, editor
- Published
- 2022
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38. History perceptions and national identity among Latvian youth: Entrapped between narratives of Latvia and Russia?
- Author
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Bērziņa, Ieva, Krūmiņš, Gatis, Šiliņš, Jānis, and Andžāns, Māris
- Subjects
- *
NATIONAL character , *YOUNG adults , *ETHNIC groups , *NARRATIVES , *MINORITIES - Abstract
This article examines the extent to which history forms national identity among Latvian youth. Being a multiethnic country, Latvia provides a unique opportunity to study the role of history in nation‐building among dominant and minority ethnic groups. The majority of Latvia's ethnic minorities are Russian‐speaking; therefore, a peculiarity of the Latvian case is the influence of the historical narratives promoted by Russia. The research problem of the paper is the formation of national identity when a foreign country promotes distorted historical narratives to discredit a state. The empirical findings are based on 30 in‐depth interviews with young people. The main conclusion is that history plays a rather limited direct role in forming national identity among youth in Latvia. The influence of Russia's historical narratives is observable but not as strong as expected in the context of Russia's influence activities. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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39. Planning for the Aftermath. Longue Durée Histories for a New International Legal Order in Kelsen, Lauterpacht and De Visscher.
- Author
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Giltaij, Jacob
- Subjects
- *
INTERNATIONAL organization , *WORLD War II , *REFUGEES , *NARRATIVES - Abstract
As early as the 1930s, the development of plans for an international legal order to be created in the aftermath of the Second World War were commonplace. This particularly concerned a group of refugee scholars hailing from the German-speaking academic world. The plans of three scholars that were personally affected by the Nazi regime are discussed, those of Hans Kelsen, Hersch Lauterpacht and Charles De Visscher. This contribution compares the plans of the three scholars as formulated in the period between 1934 and 1947, as well as the historical narratives at their core, and ventures to answer the question whether these narratives should be seen as 'invented traditions' or that the scholars perceive them as significant and crucial stages of development at the basis of their plans for a post-War international legal order. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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40. Narrative Memory Work of Employees in Family Businesses: How Founding Stories Shape Organizational Identification.
- Author
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Hoon, Christina, Brinkmann, Julia, and Baluch, Alina M.
- Subjects
ORGANIZATIONAL identification ,FAMILY-owned business enterprises ,COLLECTIVE memory ,FAMILY-work relationship ,MANUFACTURING processes - Abstract
This study is concerned with how founding stories are sustained across multiple generations of employees in family firms and how these stories influence organizational identification. Drawing on a social memory perspective and narrative memory work, we explore the retold founding stories of employees in a large agricultural family firm. Our study demonstrates that founding stories transform firsthand memories into collective memory across multiple generations through intertwining intradiegetic storytelling with material and relational processes. The effortful work of remembering together across familial and social relations, spaces, and embodied ways explains how successive generations understand their belongingness to the organization. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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41. Nationalism in the Second Redaction of the Verse Chronicle by the So-Called Dalimil
- Author
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Vojtěch Bažant
- Subjects
the chronicle by so-called dalimil ,medieval historiography ,reading medieval historiography ,nationalism ,historical narratives ,Archaeology ,CC1-960 ,Ethnology. Social and cultural anthropology ,GN301-674 ,History of Central Europe ,DAW1001-1051 - Abstract
The paper examines literary aspects of the old Czech chronicle in verses by the so-called Dalimil. It inquires into various approaches to the chronicle by both medieval and (early) modern readers. The paper argues that medieval authors read and interpreted the chronicle from diverse perspectives and emphasized different dimensions of the narrative. The second redaction of the chronicle from the second third of the fifteenth century, known for stressing the chauvinistic nationalism of the text, was one possible way of reading the chronicle. Postmedieval editors and interpreters of the chronicle saw it, on the contrary, almost exclusively as a product of medieval anti-Germanism in Bohemia. While contemporary research considers the chronicle primarily as a political manifest, the paper develops the inquiry, approaching the chronicle and medieval historiography in general as multi-layered literature combining religious, identity-centred, political, and imaginative aspects of history writing.
- Published
- 2023
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42. History and tourism: current perspectives
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Geraly Zoltan
- Subjects
tourism ,history ,historical sciences ,historical memory ,historical narratives ,metanarratives ,history and identity ,History of scholarship and learning. The humanities ,AZ20-999 - Abstract
This article examines contemporary historical research exploring the links between tourism and the transmission of historical information. Recent studies of historical methodology have begun to draw attention to the effects of adapting historical knowledge and identity formation in the course of tourism activities. With the popularisation of mass tourism, this channel has also become an effective tool for the governments and academia to promote historical concepts, historical data and build public knowledge about their own past. In this article the author summarises how scientific research on tourism has developed up to the present days.
- Published
- 2023
43. Exploring The Role Of Art In Shaping Historical Narratives.
- Author
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R., Retna Mony, Ramasamy, Ragupathi, Roy, J. Bimal, Sulochana, P., Chandrayan, Bharati, and N., Balamurugan
- Subjects
IDENTITY (Psychology) ,INFLUENCE (Literary, artistic, etc.) ,COLLECTIVE memory ,PUBLIC opinion ,CRITICAL thinking ,ART - Abstract
This research paper examines the significant role that art plays in shaping historical narratives. Art has been an integral part of human expression and communication for centuries, serving as a powerful tool for interpreting, preserving, and reshaping historical events and collective memory. By analyzing various forms of art, including visual arts, literature, music, and film, this paper explores how artists have actively participated in constructing historical narratives, challenging dominant perspectives, and providing alternative interpretations. Furthermore, it investigates the impact of artistic representations on public perception, identity formation, and the collective understanding of historical events. Through a multidisciplinary approach, this paper underscores the importance of art as a catalyst for critical thinking, dialogue, and the continuous evolution of historical narratives. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
44. W cieniu historii: Polska, Niemcy i rosyjska wojna przeciwko Ukrainie.
- Author
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GARCZEWSKI, KRZYSZTOF
- Abstract
The main objective is to analyze the place and role played by history in the operations of Poland and Germany in the field of Eastern policy, with particular emphasis on the context surrounding the Russian war against Ukraine and how it developed in the first months of this conflict. In order to demonstrate the relationship between history's influence on the present public discourse and Eastern and European policy of Poland and Germany, the article focuses on selected aspects of these countries' Eastern policy, both historically and currently. The study also shows the connection between history and politics, particularly as it relates to the Russian Federation's use of the so-called historical tools in hybrid tactics aimed at Poland, Germany, Ukraine and other democratic European countries. The text employs both the historical method and the comparative method. Additionally, discourse analysis was used in order to examine selected utterances of politicians and other representatives of public life in Poland and Germany, regarding history and Eastern policy. Selected elements of the analysis of the decision-making process related to the issues of the politics of memory, Eastern policy as well as European policy were also used. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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45. Historical Narratives from Colonial and Independence to Unison and Pluralist: The Oromo Politics since the 1970s.
- Author
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Abebe, Dechasa
- Subjects
IMPERIALISM ,PLURALISM ,HISTORICAL analysis ,ECONOMIC development - Abstract
Historical narratives of the Oromoo politics passed through several challenges without much modification from the 1970s to 2010s. However, it began to be changed fundamentally since the middle of the 2010s because of the dramatic shift of the Oromoo political goals. This article is an attempt to discuss the dynamics of these historical narratives along with the dramatic shift of the Oromoo political goals. For the purpose of this discussion, document analysis historical method has been employed by consulting and critically reviewing divergent categories of documents. Then, it is found out that the Oromoo historical narratives have apparently changed from colonial thesis targeted "Gadaa Oromia" ("Independent Republic of Oromia") to unison and pluralist thesis targeting "Greater Oromia" ("Cushitic Ethiopia") in place of the "Semitic Ethiopia" with the socio-cultural, political and economic dominance of "Oromumma" in which the overall rights of the minorities are respected. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
46. Imaging Norway by using the past.
- Author
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Angell, Svein Ivar
- Subjects
- *
NATIONAL character , *HISTORIOGRAPHY , *MODERN society , *NINETEENTH century , *NATION building - Abstract
The article analyses how history was used in efforts to portray Norway in the postwar period. The main narratives of Norwegian history played a dominating role in the construction of national images during this period. These narratives had been constructed as part of the nation-building processes of the 19th century. In several aspects, the historical narratives used in portrayals of Norway mirrored developments in Norwegian historiography in the period. In the 1960s, however, the use of these narratives to portray Norway became problematic, owing to the priority given to a new rationale of information and demands that Norway should be portrayed as a modern society. The article takes a use-of-history approach as a point of departure and argues that such an approach is fruitful in studies of how national images are constructed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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47. The histories we tell: historical consciousness and student protests in a Chilean public high school.
- Author
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Mayorga, Rodrigo
- Subjects
- *
HIGH school students , *CONSTRUCTIVISM (Education) , *TEACHING , *POLITICAL participation , *CITIZENSHIP - Abstract
In the last fifteen years, high schoolers became key actors in the Chilean political landscape, as members of anti-neoliberal and feminist social movements. Although social researchers have paid increasing attention to them, few have analyzed how these young people relate to and make use of history in the context of their political struggles. Combining an ethnographic and a microhistorical approach, this article examines a Chilean public high school and a particular and widespread historical narrative about it. I argue that the different ways in which this narrative was invoked, transmitted and contested in a context of massive student protests – and the pedagogical devices and practices of cooperation and conflict used to do so – allowed the students of this school not only to use history in favor of their political agendas, but to participate in the continual production of a political field in which the borders of their historical community and who could be considered members of it were being disputed. In doing this, the article illuminates some of the complicated interactions between historical consciousness, political action and citizenship in modern societies, as well as illustrates the usefulness of combining an historical and an ethnographic lens to visualize the nuances and tensions existing when human beings make use of history. Further, it sheds light on the concept of historical consciousness itself, illustrating how historians and other social researchers can operationalize it to better comprehend how human beings relate with the past, but also the present and the future. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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48. ОСОБЕННОСТИ ИНТЕРПРЕТАЦИИ ДРЕВНЕРИМСКИХ ИСТОРИЧЕСКИХ СЮЖЕТОВ В ПОЛЬСКОЙ ЛИТЕРАТУРЕ 19 ВЕКА
- Author
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Котиленкова А.А.
- Subjects
польская литература ,романтизм ,исторические сюжеты ,древний рим ,мессианизм ,polish literature ,romanticism ,historical narratives ,ancient rome ,messianism ,Philology. Linguistics ,P1-1091 - Abstract
В данной статье с точки зрения литературных взаимосвязей и с учетом социального, исторического и геополитического контекстов рассматриваются произведения трех ярких представителей польского романтизма – Г. Сенкевича, Й. Крашевского и З. Красиньского, объединенные общей темой истории Древнего Рима. Актуальность данной темы обусловлена не только отсутствием подобных трудов в русскоязычном литературоведении, но и, прежде всего, особой связью польского культурного кода с римской темой в культуре в целом и литературе в частности. В действительности вся польская литература 19 века была тесно связана с размышлениями на тему судьбы Польши, польского народа, а также провозглашала патриотические настроения, часто обращаясь при этом к древнеримским сюжетам и образам. Цель статьи – выявить особенности интерпретации древнеримских исторических сюжетов в польской литературе 19 века и доказать, что все вышеперечисленные авторы усматривают исторические и идеологические параллели между Древним Римом и Польшей, обращаясь, в том числе к идеям польского мессианизма. Практическая значимость статьи заключается в выявлении материала и в возможности использования данного материала при дальнейших исследованиях в данной области.
- Published
- 2023
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49. The Colonial Scramble and Its Aftermath: Writing Public Histories of the Postcolonies of Socialism
- Author
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Serguei Alex. Oushakine
- Subjects
postcolonial studies ,historical narratives ,public history ,kyrgyzstan ,kyrgyz cinema ,Slavic languages. Baltic languages. Albanian languages ,PG1-9665 - Abstract
Using a brief summary of the development of postcolonial studies and anticolonial thought as its main backdrop, the essay explores how postcolonial imagination finds its representations in various public history projects in contemporary Kyrgyzstan. By linking public history and postcolonial thought, the essay demonstrates that the production of historical narratives from below, by non-professional historians, is rarely motivated by strictly historical goals. Indeed, publicity here is a tool for subjecting historical materials to a process of deep recycling. The past is mined for forms, plots, events, and connections, which, then, enable ‘public historians’ to create and circulate stories about the present. As a result, various historical projects not only (re)establish links with previously inaccessible historical periods, but also they effectively change the public context in which non-professional historians situate themselves. Historical knowledge here is public in its form and postcolonial in its content. Relying on Kyrgyz cinema and scholarly publications, the essay identifies two separate but interrelated postcolonial discourses – the ‘poetics of orphanhood’ and the ‘politics of belonging’. It argues that these two public languages of self-description are structured around the same themes of origin and relatedness. Each discourse problematizes these topics in its own way, but both discourses are intertwined in an intriguing symbolic dialogue.
- Published
- 2021
50. The Classical World in a Norwegian Workers' Encyclopedia: Arbeidernes Leksikon (1931–1936)
- Author
-
Eivind Heldaas Seland
- Subjects
book history ,classical reception ,encyclopedias ,counterculture ,historical narratives ,Philosophy. Psychology. Religion - Abstract
The Norwegian Arbeidernes leksikon, “Workers’ Encyclopedia,” was published in six volumes from 1931–1936. It was inspired by The Great Soviet Encyclopedia, explicitly aimed at working-class readers, and establishing an alternative to the hegemonic bourgeoise discourse. The editors and many of the contributors belonged to the Communist Party of Norway (NKP) and the independent communist intellectual organization Mot Dag (“Towards Dawn”). This article investigates the reception and representation of the ancient world in Arbeidernes leksikon based on selected articles through the lens of narrative theory. Classical education was traditionally the domain of the upper classes. It is argued that the Workers’ Encyclopedia demonstrates that reorienting the reception of ancient history was considered essential both to rewrite history according to Marxist doctrine and to establish workers’ culture as a full-fledged alternative to its bourgeoise counterpart. In the Workers’ Encyclopedia, the classical past is celebrated not for its empires and rulers but for the effort of the masses and their struggle for freedom.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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