Sounding the Silences: History, Revision and Inclusion

Histories, like narratives in general, can foreground or exclude. The choice of narrative subject is an inclusory and an exclusionary gesture.

The post Sounding the Silences: History, Revision and Inclusion appeared first on Public History Weekly.

Quelle: https://public-history-weekly.degruyter.com/10-2022-2/history-revision-inclusion/

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About Today’s Collective Identity Politics

Monthly Editorial February 2020 | Einführung in den Monat Februar 2020 Copyright (c) 2020 by De Gruyter Oldenbourg and the author, all rights reserved. This work may be copied and... Read More ›

The post About Today’s Collective Identity Politics appeared first on Public History Weekly.

Quelle: https://public-history-weekly.degruyter.com/8-2020-2/identity-politics/

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“Reconquest” – Historical Narrative or Xenophobic View?

It's important to consider how human beings use historical contents like the "Reconquista": The past has been conceptually re-elaborated to maintain and to justify the present and to format the future.

The post “Reconquest” – Historical Narrative or Xenophobic View? appeared first on Public History Weekly.

Quelle: https://public-history-weekly.degruyter.com/7-2019-7/reconquista-populism/

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LUK – Reading Re-Writings of Official History

Official narratives as in LUK give us insights into national identity management. This is particularly true when they aim to project identity outwards.

The post LUK – Reading Re-Writings of Official History appeared first on Public History Weekly.

Quelle: https://public-history-weekly.degruyter.com/7-2019-3/luk/

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