集体记忆与历史叙事:非裔美国人民权运动

Richard J. Hughes, S. D. Brown
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引用次数: 1

摘要

本研究探讨了作为历史思想家的大学生如何学会与历史互动,构建他们对过去的理解,并考察了一手和第二手资料在叙事构建和修订中所起的作用。以非裔美国人民权运动为内容焦点,参与者使用图像来创建反映他们对该运动理解的初步叙述。然后,一半的参与者阅读了一篇由一位著名历史学家撰写的关于该运动的文章,另一半则阅读了反映这位历史学家对该运动解释的18个主要资料。然后,每个参与者都创造了第二种叙述,再次选择图像来描述他们对运动的理解。研究结果表明,即使学生们使用原始资料,他们也需要一个基于最新学术研究的有效叙事框架,以形成超越过时解释和历史神话的强大反叙事。就美国为种族正义而进行的漫长斗争的教学和学习而言,仅仅鼓励教师和学生“做历史”并进行自己的在线研究不太可能改变持续存在的叙事结构,这种叙事结构继续使系统性种族主义成为可能和借口。
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Collective memory and historical narratives: The African American civil rights movement
This study explores how undergraduates, as historical thinkers, learn to interact with history and construct their understanding of the past, and examines the role that primary and secondary sources play in narrative construction and revision. Using the African American civil rights movement as a content focus, participants used images to create initial narratives that reflected their understanding of the movement. Half the participants then read an essay on the movement written by a prominent historian, and the other half examined 18 primary sources that reflected the historian’s interpretation of the movement. Participants then each created a second narrative, again selecting images to depict their understanding of the movement. The results of the study suggest that even as students work with primary sources, they need an effective narrative framework based on recent scholarship to forge powerful counter-narratives that transcend outdated interpretations and historical myths. In terms of teaching and learning about the lengthy struggle for racial justice in the United States, simply encouraging teachers and students to ‘do history’ and conduct their own online research is unlikely to change persistent narrative structures that continue to enable and excuse systemic racism.
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