Friedrich N. Ammermann, P. Barrett, Olga Byrska, Elisa Chazal, Vigdis Andrea Baugstø Evang, Eoghan Christopher Hussey, Roberto Larrañaga Domínguez, Carlos Jorge Martins, F. Mohamed, S. Mörsdorf, B. Nugteren, Anna Orinsky, Rebecca Orr, C. Pantaleoni, Lucy Riall, Giorgio Riello, Asensio López, Alejandro Salamanca Rodríguez, Liu Shi, Takuya Shimada, Halit Simen
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引用次数: 0
摘要
本文由欧洲大学研究所(EUI)的一组博士研究人员和两名教师撰写,是2020年秋季在COVID-19大流行期间举行的全球历史博士研讨会的一部分。我们考虑三个主题:“全球历史的政治”,将全球历史视为一种行动主义形式;“谁的全球历史?”考虑财产和分享问题;《开放的全球历史》(An open global history)提出了一个乌托邦式的未来(针对目前的困境)。我们认为,为了让全球历史蓬勃发展,它的实践者需要更具包容性,并承认世界各地、性别和职业阶段的权力不平衡。图片说明:Sekisui Nagakubo以Matteo Ricci, Sankai Yochi Zenzu () (Naniwa, 1785)命名。国会图书馆地理和地图部,华盛顿特区
This article is authored by a group of PhD researchers at the European University Institute (EUI) and two teachers as part of the PhD seminar in Global History held in the Fall of 2020 during the COVID-19 pandemic. We consider three topics: ‘The politics of global history’ thinking about global history as a form of activism; ‘Whose global history?’ considering issues of property and sharing; and ‘An open global history’ proposing a utopian future (for a troubled present). We believe that in order for global history to thrive, its practitioners need to be more inclusive and acknowledge imbalances of power across world areas, across genders, and across career stages.
Image Caption: Sekisui Nagakubo after Matteo Ricci, Sankai Yochi Zenzu (山海輿地全圖) (Naniwa, 1785). Library of Congress Geography and Map Division Washington, D.C.