A History of Now

IF 0.5 Q1 HISTORY Public History Review Pub Date : 2020-12-20 DOI:10.5130/PHRJ.V27I0.7542
Meg Foster, T. Burton, M. Finnane, C. Fraser, Peter Hobbins, Hollie Pich
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

The connection between history and COVID-19 might appear counter-intuitive. We are used to being told by media outlets and employers, government officials and friends that we are ‘living in unprecedented times’. The COVID-19 pandemic has changed the rhythms of our daily lives, but not every response to COVID-19 has been new. It has also been understood through history. This article comes from a roundtable discussion that was held as part of NSW History Week on 11 September 2020. Bringing together historians, curators and archivists, this panel explored the way that history has been used to understand COVID-19. Particular attention was paid to attempts to record and archive our experiences through the pandemic, comparisons between COVID-19 and the ‘Spanish’ flu as well as shifting understandings of temporality during the pandemic. Although the COVID-19 pandemic has ruptured our quotidian experience, it is not a moment beyond history. This panel examined how history is being used as an anchor point, a source of inspiration and an educational tool with which to tackle ‘these uncertain times’.
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当下的历史
历史和COVID-19之间的联系似乎有悖直觉。我们已经习惯了媒体、雇主、政府官员和朋友告诉我们,我们“生活在一个前所未有的时代”。2019冠状病毒病大流行改变了我们的日常生活节奏,但并非所有应对措施都是新的。它也通过历史被理解。本文来自2020年9月11日新南威尔士州历史周举行的圆桌讨论。该小组汇集了历史学家、策展人和档案工作者,探讨了历史被用来理解COVID-19的方式。会议特别关注了记录和存档我们在大流行期间的经历的尝试,将COVID-19与“西班牙”流感进行比较,以及大流行期间对暂时性的理解的转变。虽然COVID-19大流行打破了我们的日常经验,但这并不是一个超越历史的时刻。这个小组探讨了历史如何被用作一个锚点,一个灵感来源和一个教育工具,以应对“这些不确定的时代”。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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0.00%
发文量
3
审稿时长
52 weeks
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