Public History for a Post-Truth Era explores how to combat historical denial when faith in facts is at an all-time low.
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Autorenporträt
Liz sevcenko is Founding Director of the Humanities Action Lab, currently homed at Rutgers University-Newark, and was the Founding Director of the International Coalition of Sites of Conscience. She organizes coalitions for historical memory and redress, combining the visions and forces of people working in public history, social movements, and transitional justice. She lives in Brooklyn.
Inhaltsangabe
Introduction / 1 Snapshots from Memory Movements at the turn of the Millenium Album 1: Heritage and Human Rights in New York Nottinghamshire Buenos Aires and Cape Town / 2 Snapshots from Memory Movements at the turn of the Millenium Album 2: Truth without Accountability in Bangladesh Czech Republic Russia U.S. and Senegal / 3 Defining Memory Dialogue and Action / 4 Assessing Impact / 5 How GTMO's History has been Shaped by Denial: Public Memory and Public Policy in America's State of Exception / 6 Remembering and Reckoning with GTMO / 7 Mobilizing an International Memory Movement for GTMO / 8 Public Memory and the U.S. Carceral State / 9 Remembering Rikers: Participatory Public Memory for Public Policy / 10 Local Stories National Genealogy: Memory Movements Against Mass Incarceration / 11 Historical Denial and the Climate Crisis / Conclusion
Introduction / 1 Snapshots from Memory Movements at the turn of the Millenium, Album 1: Heritage and Human Rights in New York, Nottinghamshire, Buenos Aires, and Cape Town / 2 Snapshots from Memory Movements at the turn of the Millenium, Album 2: Truth without Accountability in Bangladesh, Czech Republic, Russia, U.S., and Senegal / 3 Defining Memory, Dialogue, and Action / 4 Assessing Impact / 5 How GTMO's History has been Shaped by Denial: Public Memory and Public Policy in America's State of Exception / 6 Remembering and Reckoning with GTMO / 7 Mobilizing an International Memory Movement for GTMO / 8 Public Memory and the U.S. Carceral State / 9 Remembering Rikers: Participatory Public Memory for Public Policy / 10 Local Stories, National Genealogy: Memory Movements Against Mass Incarceration / 11 Historical Denial and the Climate Crisis / Conclusion
Introduction / 1 Snapshots from Memory Movements at the turn of the Millenium Album 1: Heritage and Human Rights in New York Nottinghamshire Buenos Aires and Cape Town / 2 Snapshots from Memory Movements at the turn of the Millenium Album 2: Truth without Accountability in Bangladesh Czech Republic Russia U.S. and Senegal / 3 Defining Memory Dialogue and Action / 4 Assessing Impact / 5 How GTMO's History has been Shaped by Denial: Public Memory and Public Policy in America's State of Exception / 6 Remembering and Reckoning with GTMO / 7 Mobilizing an International Memory Movement for GTMO / 8 Public Memory and the U.S. Carceral State / 9 Remembering Rikers: Participatory Public Memory for Public Policy / 10 Local Stories National Genealogy: Memory Movements Against Mass Incarceration / 11 Historical Denial and the Climate Crisis / Conclusion
Introduction / 1 Snapshots from Memory Movements at the turn of the Millenium, Album 1: Heritage and Human Rights in New York, Nottinghamshire, Buenos Aires, and Cape Town / 2 Snapshots from Memory Movements at the turn of the Millenium, Album 2: Truth without Accountability in Bangladesh, Czech Republic, Russia, U.S., and Senegal / 3 Defining Memory, Dialogue, and Action / 4 Assessing Impact / 5 How GTMO's History has been Shaped by Denial: Public Memory and Public Policy in America's State of Exception / 6 Remembering and Reckoning with GTMO / 7 Mobilizing an International Memory Movement for GTMO / 8 Public Memory and the U.S. Carceral State / 9 Remembering Rikers: Participatory Public Memory for Public Policy / 10 Local Stories, National Genealogy: Memory Movements Against Mass Incarceration / 11 Historical Denial and the Climate Crisis / Conclusion
Rezensionen
The denial of substantiated realities of the past is examined in Liz Sevcenko's incisive contribution, which explores questions of truth, consensus, and power in public histories from several critical perspectives. Written in an accessible and clear style, it is punctuated by personal reflections and offers a lucid treatment of the subject. This breadth and depth make it a valuable addition to literature on this vital topic.
Florence Evans, University of Amsterdam, Netherlands, in Museums & Social Issues
"Well written and richly detailed, Public History for a Post-Truth Era is a worthy addition to Routledge's Global Perspectives in Public History series...Public historians and their students will find this book most useful as a behind-the-scenes guide, and historians of all types will appreciate the stimulating questions Sevcenko raises-sometimes intentionally, sometimes not-about facts, truth, historical method, and expertise."
Meredith H. Lair, George Mason University, in The Public Historian, Volume 46, Number 2, May 2024, pp. 172-174
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