As issues of history, memory, and identity collide with increasing frequency and intensity in the classroom and society, the timing is ideal to investigate the impact of these forces on twenty-first-century students. Relying on the theory of historical consciousness, this book presents the results o
Beyond History for Historical Consciousness: Students, Narrative, and Memory
β Scribed by Stephane Levesque; Jean-Philippe Croteau
- Publisher
- University of Toronto Press
- Year
- 2020
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 211
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
This book offers the first ever comparative study of historical consciousness among young citizens from different regions, provinces, identities, and first languages.
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
<p>This book offers the first ever comparative study of historical consciousness among young citizens from different regions, provinces, identities, and first languages.</p>
<p>Family history is one of the most widely practiced forms of public history around the globe, especially in settler migrant nations like Australia and Canada. It empowers millions of researchers, linking the past to the present in powerful ways, transforming individuals' understandings of themselv
Family history is one of the most widely practiced forms of public history around the globe, especially in settler migrant nations like Australia and Canada. It empowers millions of researchers, linking the past to the present in powerful ways, transforming individualsβ understandings of themselves
Guided by Ezra Pound's dictum --"Make it new"--a generation of writers set out to create fiction and poetry that was unlike anything that came before it. However, as Seamus O'Malley shows, historical narrative was a key site for modernist experimentation. Taking three of literary modernism's major