Public History in Russia: The Past, the Present, and (Thoughts About) the Future

IF 0.3 Q2 HISTORY International Public History Pub Date : 2022-12-01 DOI:10.1515/iph-2022-2052
Andrei Zavadski, V. Dubina, E. Isaev, A. Kolesnik, J. Lajus, Katerina Suverina
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Abstract

Abstract This discussion’s participants – all public historians working on Russia, albeit from different disciplinary backgrounds and with different areas of expertise – speak about the past and the present of (public) history in the country, and touch upon possible futures. Beginning with an acknowledgment of the immense interest in historical knowledge that characterized the 1990s, the conversation goes on to examine the rise of the official historical politics in Putin’s Russia and their impact on historical science, memory work, and public engagement with the past more broadly. These developments contextualize the establishment of the first public history programs at Russian universities in the early 2010s, discussed here both in their specificities and compared to other countries. At the heart of the conversation is the war of aggression that Russia launched against Ukraine in February 2022. The participants of the discussion see it as a caesura, while at the same highlighting continuities in the regime’s historical politics before and after the invasion. Issues of postcolonialism and decolonization are also raised, as well as the question of (public) historians’ responsibility for the ongoing tragedy.
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俄罗斯公共史:过去、现在和(关于)未来
摘要本次讨论的参与者——所有研究俄罗斯的公共历史学家,尽管来自不同的学科背景和不同的专业领域——谈论了该国(公共)历史的过去和现在,并谈到了可能的未来。从承认20世纪90年代对历史知识的巨大兴趣开始,对话继续探讨了普京领导下的俄罗斯官方历史政治的兴起,以及它们对历史科学、记忆工作和公众更广泛地参与过去的影响。这些发展使俄罗斯大学在2010年代初建立了第一个公共历史项目,在这里讨论了它们的特殊性以及与其他国家的比较。对话的核心是俄罗斯于2022年2月对乌克兰发动的侵略战争。讨论的参与者将其视为一场闹剧,同时强调了入侵前后该政权历史政治的连续性。还提出了后殖民主义和非殖民化的问题,以及(公共)历史学家对正在发生的悲剧的责任问题。
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来源期刊
International Public History
International Public History Arts and Humanities-History
CiteScore
0.40
自引率
0.00%
发文量
12
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