Can Architecture Embody Good and Evil?

Architecture doesn't in themselves represent specific worldviews. The immanent significance of stones, bricks and mortar is regarded as being negligible to nonexistent. Public History and bricks.

The post Can Architecture Embody Good and Evil? appeared first on Public History Weekly.

Quelle: https://public-history-weekly.degruyter.com/5-2017-36/can-architecture-embody-good-and-evil/

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Photographs and Occupied Cities

Historical photos are a favoured instrument of Public Historians, especially in exhibitions. They evoke emotions and create narrative dimensions for a broad audience.

The post Photographs and Occupied Cities appeared first on Public History Weekly.

Quelle: https://public-history-weekly.degruyter.com/5-2017-18/photographs-and-occupied-cities/

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Digital Public History narratives with Photographs

English

 

Social Media are “a group of Internet-based applications that build on the ideological and technological foundations of Web 2.0, and that allow the creation and exchange of user-generated content.”[1] They facilitate various forms of web communication between individuals and communities. They can bring users together to discuss common issues and to share traces of the past. Local communities’ engagement with the past, mediated or not, are made possible through Web 2.0 practices. New virtual contacts could be built when communities are no longer present in physical spaces.[2]



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Quelle: http://public-history-weekly.oldenbourg-verlag.de/3-2015-31/digital-public-history-narratives-with-photographs/

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