Our sudden interest in memory has something to do with the democratization of history, with our interest in how literally every one saw themselves. It has something to do too with our loss of faith in the coherence and objectivity of professional history. Memory, unlike older conceptions of national character or American culture, tends to divide as much as unify
This publication is a short address made by William H. Kilpatrick to the Southern Club of Columbia U...
Scholars of the American South generally end their studies of Confederate memorization just before W...
In recent years, contemporary observers and scholars have argued that the distinctiveness of the Ame...
Lewis Simpson first used the term ‘postsouthern’ to define the state of the American South in an era...
How and Why Americans Remember Reconstruction -- and Why They May be Forgetting It Civil War memory ...
This dissertation is a study of organized, professional history in the American South centered on tw...
Paper on the planned demolition of the historically black James B. Dudley High School (Greensboro, N...
This diploma thesis focuses on the role of the American Civil War memory in the American society tod...
Newly emerging, transitional societies –– that is, societies that traded dictatorial or authoritaria...
The industrial expansion of the twentieth century brought with it a profound shift away from traditi...
Nostalgia, as a form of memory, is an integral part of our everyday world; its presence is indisputa...
This paper addresses racial discrimination during World War II and deals with conflicting memories o...
If Robert J. Cook’s Civil War Memories: Contesting the Past in the United States since 1865 makes on...
This thesis aims to recast the story of how white Southern identity and political culture evolved du...
My reading of a set of essays under the title The Civil Rights Movement in American Memory (2006), e...
This publication is a short address made by William H. Kilpatrick to the Southern Club of Columbia U...
Scholars of the American South generally end their studies of Confederate memorization just before W...
In recent years, contemporary observers and scholars have argued that the distinctiveness of the Ame...
Lewis Simpson first used the term ‘postsouthern’ to define the state of the American South in an era...
How and Why Americans Remember Reconstruction -- and Why They May be Forgetting It Civil War memory ...
This dissertation is a study of organized, professional history in the American South centered on tw...
Paper on the planned demolition of the historically black James B. Dudley High School (Greensboro, N...
This diploma thesis focuses on the role of the American Civil War memory in the American society tod...
Newly emerging, transitional societies –– that is, societies that traded dictatorial or authoritaria...
The industrial expansion of the twentieth century brought with it a profound shift away from traditi...
Nostalgia, as a form of memory, is an integral part of our everyday world; its presence is indisputa...
This paper addresses racial discrimination during World War II and deals with conflicting memories o...
If Robert J. Cook’s Civil War Memories: Contesting the Past in the United States since 1865 makes on...
This thesis aims to recast the story of how white Southern identity and political culture evolved du...
My reading of a set of essays under the title The Civil Rights Movement in American Memory (2006), e...
This publication is a short address made by William H. Kilpatrick to the Southern Club of Columbia U...
Scholars of the American South generally end their studies of Confederate memorization just before W...
In recent years, contemporary observers and scholars have argued that the distinctiveness of the Ame...