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Historical Memories in Culture, Politics and the Future: The Making of History and the World to Come

✍ Scribed by Rahman Haghighat


Publisher
Peter Lang
Year
2014
Tongue
English
Leaves
290
Category
Library

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✦ Synopsis


This book is written to satisfy the individual’s desire for intellectual stimulation, to sow in the mind the seed of new ideas, and involve the reader in productive debates. It covers culture, history and the future, raising questions, presenting arguments and engaging the enquirer in reflection. It illustrates the relationship between past history and current social practices, proposing the concept of compartmentalization of behaviour, where history is understood to contribute to why there are so many displaced excesses amongst the English, alongside an ethos of moderation – why, in a country with such high civility, there is hooliganism, why riots in English cities can be particularly violent, why the country has the highest rate of teenage pregnancy in Europe, why it lags behind many others in the early diagnosis of cancer – and what can be done about this.

The book also explores what affects us all globally – the making of history, the psychology of dictatorships, the unconscious in history, the development of new democracies, the emerging psychosocial trends in the world to come, the cognitive, emotional and identity-ethos of the evolving century and the Β«futureΒ» of history. Finally, it identifies history’s foundations and the fundamental human tendency which, beyond the class interests of Marx and the search for recognition of Hegel, motivates and perpetuates history itself.

✦ Table of Contents


Introduction: Historical Memories in Culture, Identity, Politics, Personality and Future
A Historical Memory from Old England
The Essence of Englishness
The Workhouse of History
Historical Memories of Tradition
Truth, Discourse and Interpretation: Henry V
Truth, Discourse and Interpretation: Joan of Arc
The Psychology of Dictatorship
Healing the Wounds of History
The Future of History


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