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Popular presentations of history have recently been discovered as a
new field of research, and even though interest in it has been
growing noticeably very little has been published on this topic.
This volume is one of the first to open up this new area of
historical research, introducing some of the work that has emerged
in Germany over the past few years. While mainly focusing on
Germany (though not exclusively), the authors analyze different
forms of popular historiographies and popular presentations of
history since 1800 and the interrelation between popular and
academic historiography, exploring in particular popular histories
in different media and popular historiography as part of memory
culture.
Popular presentations of history have recently been discovered as a
new field of research, and even though interest in it has been
growing noticeably very little has been published on this topic.
This volume is one of the first to open up this new area of
historical research, introducing some of the work that has emerged
in Germany over the past few years. While mainly focusing on
Germany (though not exclusively), the authors analyze different
forms of popular historiographies and popular presentations of
history since 1800 and the interrelation between popular and
academic historiography, exploring in particular popular histories
in different media and popular historiography as part of memory
culture.
The nineteenth century, a time of far-reaching cultural, political,
and socio-economic transformation in Europe, brought about
fundamental changes in the role of women. Women achieved this by
fighting for their rights in the legal, economic, and political
spheres. In the various parts of Europe, this process went forward
at a different pace and followed different patterns. Most
historical research up to now has ignored this diversity,
preferring to focus on women's emancipation movements in major
western European countries such as Britain and France. The present
volume provides a broader context to the movement by including
countries both large and small from all regions of Europe. Fourteen
historians, all of them specialists in women's history, examine the
origins and development of women's emancipation movements in their
respective areas of expertise. By exploring the cultural and
political diversity of nineteenth-century Europe and at the same
time pointing out connections to questions explored by conventional
scholarship, the essays shed new light on common developments and
problems.
The present boom in popular history is not unprecedented. The
contributions to this volume investigate peaks of historical
interest which favour popular approaches from around 1800 to the
present. They analyse the media, genres, and institutions through
which historical knowledge has been disseminated--from artifacts to
the archive, from poetry to photography, from music to murals, and
from periodicals to popular TV series. They ask how major
traditions in the popular imagery of the past have evolved and
changed over time. Cultural contexts covered in the book include
Western and Southern Europe, the United States, and West Africa.
Contributors come from a range of disciplines, including history,
literary and cultural studies, musicology as well as social and
cultural anthropology.
This volume addresses the complex relationship between memory,
culture, and gender - as well as the representation of women in
national memory - in several European countries. An international
group of contributors explore the national allegories of memory in
the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, the relationship between
violence and war in the recollections of both families and the
state, and the methodological approaches that can be used to study
a gendered culture of memory.
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