The article considers the contribution that discursive psychology can make to the study of accounts of a troubled past, using, as relevant examples, testimonies of Holocaust survivors and confessions of collaboration with the secret police in communist Eastern Europe. Survivor testimonies and confessions of former informants are analyzed as instances of public remembering which straddle historical and psychological enquiries: they are, at the same time, stories of individual fates, replete with references to psychological states, motives and cognitions, and discourses of history, part of a socially and institutionally mediated collective struggle with a painful, unsettling, or traumatic past. Also, the examples point to two different ways ...
The article is devoted to the therapeutic dimension of oral history, which forces researchers to ado...
Promises and challenges in the discursive study of social representations of histor
Remembering is a complex and notoriously fallible process. This is partly because memory is not an e...
The article considers the contribution that discursive psychology can make to the study of accounts ...
The article considers the contribution that discursive psychology can make to the study of accounts ...
The article offers a critical examination of “borrowing” as a form of interdisciplinary engagement b...
The article will discuss the specific character of testimony about traumatic experiences of the Worl...
The article is about the relationship between two scientific fields – history and psychology – with ...
This article is concerned with the emotional processes that animate historical work. Starting with a...
The article offers a critical examination of “borrowing” as a form of interdisciplinary engagement b...
How can severely traumatized persons re-present the past and its impact on the present if (due to bl...
Mistakes can be made in both personal and official accounts of past events: lies can be told. Storie...
This book consists of two main parts. The first part offers a basic methodological introduction, pre...
This paper is concerned with how biography, memory, and identity are managed and displayed in a publ...
Abstract The essay focuses on the relationship between memory and history, which has changed inmanyw...
The article is devoted to the therapeutic dimension of oral history, which forces researchers to ado...
Promises and challenges in the discursive study of social representations of histor
Remembering is a complex and notoriously fallible process. This is partly because memory is not an e...
The article considers the contribution that discursive psychology can make to the study of accounts ...
The article considers the contribution that discursive psychology can make to the study of accounts ...
The article offers a critical examination of “borrowing” as a form of interdisciplinary engagement b...
The article will discuss the specific character of testimony about traumatic experiences of the Worl...
The article is about the relationship between two scientific fields – history and psychology – with ...
This article is concerned with the emotional processes that animate historical work. Starting with a...
The article offers a critical examination of “borrowing” as a form of interdisciplinary engagement b...
How can severely traumatized persons re-present the past and its impact on the present if (due to bl...
Mistakes can be made in both personal and official accounts of past events: lies can be told. Storie...
This book consists of two main parts. The first part offers a basic methodological introduction, pre...
This paper is concerned with how biography, memory, and identity are managed and displayed in a publ...
Abstract The essay focuses on the relationship between memory and history, which has changed inmanyw...
The article is devoted to the therapeutic dimension of oral history, which forces researchers to ado...
Promises and challenges in the discursive study of social representations of histor
Remembering is a complex and notoriously fallible process. This is partly because memory is not an e...