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In: Remembering the modern world
1. 'No man's land' and the creation of partitioned histories in India/Pakistan / Pippa Virdee -- 2. Three films, one genocide : remembering the Armenian genocide through Ravished Armenia(s) / Donna-Lee Frieze -- 3. Memorial stories : commemorating the Rwanda genocide through fiction / Nicki Hitchcott -- 4. To be hunted like animals : Samuel and Joseph Chanesman remember their survival in the Polish countryside during the Holocaust / Pam Maclean -- 5. Set in stone? The intergenerational and institutional transmission of Holocaust memory / Avril Alba -- 6. National memory and museums : remembering settler colonial genocide of indigenous peoples in Canada / Tricia Logan -- 7. Memory at the site : witnessing, education and the repurposing of Tuol Sleng and Choeung Ek in Cambodia / Elena Lesley-Rozen -- 8. Contested notions of genocide and commemoration : the case of the herero in Namibia / Henning Melber -- 9. Burying genocide : official remembrance and reconciliation in Australia / Damien Short -- 10. Bodies of evidence : remembering the Rwandan genocide at Murambi / Nigel Eltringham.
In: Remembering the Modern World
Remembering independence: concepts and media -- Independence Days: evoking the past, contesting the present, building the future -- National heroes: making and unmaking the remembered -- Martyrs, victims and anti-heroes: revisiting the national gallery -- Regional aspirations and legitimising centres: constructing a national mnemonic landscape -- Adjusting the clock: temporal flexibility in remembering independence -- Final reflections -- Appendix: brief portraits of case study countries.
In: Journal of contemporary history, Band 39, Heft 4, S. 473-485
ISSN: 1461-7250
In: Bulletin of the atomic scientists, Band 56, Heft 2, S. 3-4
ISSN: 1938-3282
In: Synthese: an international journal for epistemology, methodology and philosophy of science, Band 200, Heft 3
ISSN: 1573-0964
AbstractDretske has provided very influential arguments that there is a difference between our sensory awareness of objects and our awareness of facts about these objects—that there is a difference, for example, between seeing x and seeing that x is F. This distinction between simple and epistemic seeing is a staple of the philosophy of perception. Memory is often usefully compared to perception, and in this spirit I argue for the conditional claim that if Dretske's arguments succeed in motivating the posit of simple seeing, then parallel arguments should equally motivate a posit I call simple remembering. Simple remembering would be a conscious form of memory about an object or event which is prior to and independent of any beliefs the subject may or may not form about the object or event simply remembered.
In: Journal of the history of economic thought, Band 25, Heft 2, S. 133-143
ISSN: 1469-9656
I showed a draft of my presidential address to a friend the other day. He read for a few minutes, then looked up at me and said, "Your address will be remembered long after The Wealth of Nations, Ricardo's Principles, and The General Theory are all forgotten, but not until then!"Remembering is what we who read, write, and teach history of economics are about. Historians preserve memory; we collect historical facts, organize them, and store them in conceptual filing systems. Remembering accurately and fully is hard work. Memory is tricky. It is always incomplete. It is well known that different witnesses to an event such as a traffic accident can remember the event quite differently, so that their accounts of what happened seem incompatible with each other. They may even appear not to be reports of the same event.
Intro -- Remembering Digitally -- Table of Contents -- Introduction -- Part 1: Concepts in Digitizing Individual and Community Memory -- Digitalized Memory and the Loss of Social Memory -- Memory and Place: From Ancient Individual Memory to Cyberspace as Contemporary Collective Memory Segah Sak -- Part 2: Digitized Memories -- Social and Technological Influences on Engagement with Personal Memory Objects: A Media Roles Perspective -- How Digitalization has Unveiled Secret Memories: The Case of Samizdat Writings -- Part 3: Memory Architectures -- Objects of Storytelling and Digital Memory (MEMO) -- Digital Memories and Rhetorical Devices: A Temporal Analysis of the Web.
In: Canberra Papers on Strategy and Defence
Remembering Hedley commemorates the life of Hedley Bull (1932–85), a pivotal figure in the fields of international relations and strategic studies. Its publication coincides with the official opening on 6 August 2008 of the Hedley Bull Centre at The Australian National University in Canberra.
In: Ethnic Studies Review, Band 46, Heft 1-2, S. 98-116
ISSN: 2576-2915
As United States v. Bhagat Singh Thind becomes an important site of collective memory and identity formation, the hundred-year anniversary of the decision presents itself as an occasion for critical reflection about how we make sense of this particular past, our identification within it, and its relevance to our contemporary moment. Thind has been read primarily as a case about the racial identification of Indians in the United States and their racialized exclusion from citizenship. This essay explores some of the limits of that framing, arguing that it tends to reify legal constructions of racial difference while obscuring the imperial dimensions of the case, namely Thind's involvement with the transnational anticolonial Ghadar movement. Moreover, to remember the case as primarily one about racial injury consigns us to liberal frameworks of rights and recognition and to recapitulating nationalist narratives of racialized exclusion and earned inclusion, leaving unexamined the role that neoliberal immigration policies have played in conditioning Asian migration since the 1960s. Rather than continuously retrace the racial wounds inflicted by Thind, the memorialization of the case might focus on the continuing relevance of the anticolonial and anticapitalism movements that so excited the political imagination of Thind and his contemporaries. Such radical remembering might enable us to disrupt imposed forms of racial identity, as well as the liberal frameworks within which they are embedded, to rehearse the kinds of collaboration needed to confront ongoing crisis of colonial capitalism.
In: Prispevki za novejšo zgodovino: Contributions to the contemporary history = Contributions à l'histoire contemporaine = Beiträge zur Zeitgeschichte, Band 62, Heft 1
ISSN: 2463-7807
Historically, the role of journalism in society is bound to the prevailing conceptualization of the freedom of the press, specific societal, institutional, and material conditions of news production. This study explores self-perceptions of journalists working in the period of socialist Yugoslavia and synthetizes their recollections of journalistic orientations and performances with respect to journalism's place in society. The study is based on the oral history interviews with former journalists, who worked also as editors and foreign correspondents from late 1950s to 1990s at the news agency Tanjug, which was considered the information backbone of the federal media system in Yugoslavia and had considerable international relevance. By combining 'journalistic roles' studies as well as 'occupational life history' research this historical study makes twofold contribution. First, it identifies adaptive strategies of remembering used by the interviewed journalists to legitimize themselves as professionals and relevant interpreters of SFRY journalism. Second, it reveals more nuances within common, often simplified understandings of journalists as collaborators with power during socialism, and highlights roles of privileged disseminator, monitoring analyst, and educator as specific manifestations of collaborative function of journalism.
In: The volunteer management report: the monthly idea source for those who manage volunteers, Band 27, Heft 11, S. 6-6
ISSN: 2325-8578
In: American anthropologist: AA, Band 107, Heft 1, S. 126-127
ISSN: 1548-1433
In: Occidentalism: Modernity and Subjectivity, S. 14-71
In: Anthropological quarterly: AQ, Band 82, Heft 4, S. 1073-1076
ISSN: 1534-1518