From the Greek Revolution of 1821 to the Metapolitefsi: Historiographical Debates in Greece across Two Centuries

Q3 Arts and Humanities
Historein Pub Date : 2021-07-06 DOI:10.12681/HISTOREIN.25634
Vangelis Karamanolakis, C. Triantafyllou
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

Nowadays, with the celebration of the Greek state’s bicentennial, the exploration of how the national past was debated, historicised and narrated through historiographical and political means holds an interesting position: by examining how certain pasts entered the national canon, how events and figures were pantheonised, and how history and memory wars were conducted, we may be able to assess why and how nation-states commemorate themselves and formulate narratives about the shared past. Using the past as a symbolic resource, the agents of political and social power seek to provide the definitive version of how and why did we arrive at the present. Simultaneously, these official versions of the past are constantly contested by opposing social forces, which frequently manage to have their versions merge with, incorporated into or stand alongside those of their opponents. It is through these procedures, namely historiographical debates such as these explored in this issue of Historein, that the past turns into history.
从1821年希腊革命到元政治:两个世纪以来希腊的史学争论
如今,随着希腊建国二百周年的庆祝,探索国家过去是如何通过史学和政治手段进行辩论、历史化和叙述的,占据了一个有趣的位置:通过研究某些过去是如何进入国家正典的,事件和人物是如何被泛神论的,以及历史和记忆战争是如何进行的,我们也许能够评估民族国家为什么以及如何纪念自己,并制定关于共同过去的叙事。政治和社会权力的代理人利用过去作为象征性资源,试图提供我们是如何以及为什么来到现在的最终版本。与此同时,这些官方版本的过去不断受到对立社会力量的质疑,他们经常设法将自己的版本与对手的版本合并、合并或站在一起。正是通过这些程序,即历史辩论,如本期《历史》所探讨的,过去才成为历史。
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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来源期刊
Historein
Historein Arts and Humanities-History
CiteScore
0.20
自引率
0.00%
发文量
22
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