1st Edition

The Varieties of Historical Experience

Edited By Stephan Palmié, Charles Stewart Copyright 2019
    288 Pages
    by Routledge

    288 Pages 21 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    This book considers how history is not just objectively lived but subjectively experienced by people in the process of orienting their present toward the past. It analyses affectivity in historical experience, examines the digital mediation of history, and assesses the current politics of competing historical genres. The contributors explore the diverse ways in which the past may be activated and felt in the here and now, juxtaposing the practices of professional historiography with popular modes of engaging the past, from reenactments, filmmaking/viewing and historical fiction to museum collections and visits to historical sites. By examining the divergent forms of historical experience that flourish in the shadow of historicism in the West, this volume demonstrates how, and how widely (socially), the understanding of the past exceeds the expectations and frameworks of professional historicism. It makes the case that historians and the discipline of History could benefit from an ethnographic approach in order to assess the social reception of their practice now, and into a near future increasingly conditioned by digital media and demands for experiential immediacy.

    1. Introduction: The Varieties of Historical Experience  2. The Generic Turn: Genre, Audience, and Reclaiming Historical Authority  3. Biographical Construction and Intertextual Being  4. Gooseflesh: Music, Somatosensation, and the Making of Historical Experience  5. Affective Democracy: Building a Community of Feeling through Spanish Mass Grave Exhumations  6. Memory, Mediation, and the Aesthetic: Reframing Waterloo  7. Of Arks and Dragons: The Power of Entertainment in Creationist Historicity  8. Bodies, Artifacts and Ghosts: NAGPRA, Ceremonies of Repossession and the Unsettling of Settler Colonialism  9. Competing Roadways, Contesting Bloodlines: Registers of Biopower at a Lynching Reenactment and a Confederate Flag Rally  10. Iterative Interactions: Old and New Media Inflections of the Historical Imagination  11. Sensors and Sources: How a Universal Model of Instrumentation Affects Our Experiences of the Past  12. Towards a New Historical Condition

    Biography

    Stephan Palmié is Professor of Anthropology at The University of Chicago, USA.





    Charles Stewart is Professor of Anthropology at University College London, UK.