The yearning for historical justice has become one of the defining features of our age. Governments, international bodies and civil society organisations address historical injustices through truth commissions, tribunals, official apologies and other transitional justice measures. Historians produce knowledge of past human rights violations, and museums, memorials and commemorative ceremonies try to keep that knowledge alive and remember the victims of injustices. In this book, researchers explore the various attempts to recover and remember the past as a means of addressing historic wrongs.…mehr
The yearning for historical justice has become one of the defining features of our age. Governments, international bodies and civil society organisations address historical injustices through truth commissions, tribunals, official apologies and other transitional justice measures. Historians produce knowledge of past human rights violations, and museums, memorials and commemorative ceremonies try to keep that knowledge alive and remember the victims of injustices. In this book, researchers explore the various attempts to recover and remember the past as a means of addressing historic wrongs. This book was originally published as a special issue of Rethinking History.Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Klaus Neumann is a trained historian who works as a research professor at the Swinburne Institute for Social Research, Swinburne University of Technology, in Melbourne, Australia. Recent titles include Across the Seas: Australia's Response to Refugees: A History (2015) and Historical Justice (ed., with Janna Thompson, 2015). He is currently researching issues of historical justice, the policy response to refugees, asylum seekers and other irregular migrants, and the politics of compassion.
Inhaltsangabe
1. Introduction: Historians and the yearning for historical justice 2. The disappearing museum 3. Stumbling blocks in Germany 4. The ethics of nostalgia in post-apartheid South Africa 5. Excavating Tempelhof airfield: objects of memory and the politics of absence 6. Jewish Haifa denies its Arab past 7. Ghosts and compañeros: haunting stories and the quest for justice around Argentina's former terror sites 8. The desire for justice, psychic reparation and the politics of memory in 'post-conflict' Northern Ireland
1. Introduction: Historians and the yearning for historical justice 2. The disappearing museum 3. Stumbling blocks in Germany 4. The ethics of nostalgia in post-apartheid South Africa 5. Excavating Tempelhof airfield: objects of memory and the politics of absence 6. Jewish Haifa denies its Arab past 7. Ghosts and compañeros: haunting stories and the quest for justice around Argentina's former terror sites 8. The desire for justice, psychic reparation and the politics of memory in 'post-conflict' Northern Ireland
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