The Palgrave Handbook of State-Sponsored History After 1945 1st Edition – Ebook Instant Download/Delivery ISBN(s): 9781349953059,9781349953066,1349953059,1349953067
Product details:
- ISBN 10:1349953067
- ISBN 13:9781349953066
- Author: Berber Bevernage, Nico Wouters
Table contents:
1. State-Sponsored History After 1945: An Introduction
Part I. Memory Laws and Legislated History
2. Laws Governing the Historian’s Free Expression
3. Writing History Through Criminal Law: State-Sponsored Memory in Rwanda
4. French Memory Laws and the Ambivalence About the Meaning of Colonialism
5. History Watch by the European Court of Human Rights
6. Legislated History in Post-Communist Lithuania
Part II. Archives and Libraries
7. Archives, Agency, and the State
8. Open Archives to Close the Past: Bulgarian Archival Disclosure on the Road to European Union Accession
9. Archives and Post-Colonial State-Sponsored History: A Dual State Approach Using the Case of the “Migrated Archives”
10. The “Cleansing” of Croatian Libraries in the 1990s and Beyond or How (Not) to Discard the Yugoslav Past
Part III. Research Institutes and Policies
11. State Authority and Historical Research: Institutional Settings and Trends Since 1945
12. Official History Reconsidered: The Tadhana Project in the Philippines
13. History Riding on the Waves of Government Coalitions: The First Fifteen Years of the Institute of National Remembrance in Poland (2001–2016)
Part IV. Schools, Curricula and Textbooks
14. History in Schools
15. History Teaching for the Unification of Europe: The Case of the Council of Europe
16. Teaching History Under Dictatorship: The Politics of Textbooks and the Legitimation of Authority in Mobutu’s Zaire
17. The “National Dream” to Cultural Mosaic: State-Sponsored History in Canadian Education
18. China’s History School Curricula and Textbook Reform in East Asian Context
19. Teaching History in Israel–Palestine
Part V. Museums and Musealisation
20. History Museums
21. “State-Supported History” at the Local Level: Ostdeutsche Heimatstuben and Expellee Museums in West Germany
22. State Agency and the Definition of Historical Events: The Case of the Museo de La Memoria Y Los Derechos Humanos in Santiago, Chile
23. History Wars in Germany and Australia: National Museums and the Relegitimisation of Nationhood
Part VI. Memorials, Monuments and Heritage
24. Memorials and State-Sponsored History
25. Spaces of Nationhood and Contested Soviet War Monuments in Poland: The Warsaw Monument to the Brotherhood in Arms
26. Heritage Statecraft: Transcending Methodological Nationalism in the Russian Federation
Part VII. Courts, Tribunals and Judicial History
27. The State, the Courts, and the Lessons of History: An Overview, with Reference to Some Emblematic Cases
28. The Historian’s Trial: John Demjanjuk and the Prosecution of Atrocity
29. Germany Versus Germany: Resistance Against Hitler, Postwar Judiciary and the 1952 Remer Case
30. Historical Testimony for the Government in US v. Philip Morris, et al.
31. A One-Sided Coin: A Critical Analysis of the Legal Accounts of the Cypriot Conflicts
Part VIII. Truth Commissions and Commissioned History
32. Truth Commissions and the Construction of History
33. Truth Commissions and the Politics of History: A Critical Appraisal
34. The Brazilian National Truth Commission (2012–2014) as a State-Commissioned History Project
35. The 9/11 Commission Report: History Under the Sign of Memory
36. Truths of the Dictatorship: Chile’s Rettig and Valech Commissions as State-Sponsored History
Part IX. Historical Expert Commissions and Commissioned History
37. Historical Expert Commissions and Their Politics
38. Reconstituting the Dutch State in the NIOD Srebrenica Report
39. Memory Institutions and Policies in Colombia: The Historical Memory Group and the Historical Commission on the Conflict and Its Victims
40. Diversified and Globalized Memories: The Limits of State-Sponsored History Commissions in East Asia
41. Switzerland’s Independent Commission of Experts: State-Sponsored History and the Challenges of Political Partisanship
Part X. Official Apologies and Diplomatic History
42. Historical State Apologies
43. Apology Failures: Japan’s Strategies Towards China and Korea in Dealing with Its Imperialist Past
44. The “Apology to Australia’s Indigenous Peoples” in Its Historical Context
45. Narrative Robustness, Post-Apology Conduct, and Canada’s 1998 and 2008 Residential Schools Apologies
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