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Människokunskap och långa tidsaxlar

Österberg, Eva LU (2013) In Scandia 79(2). p.125-135
Abstract
Referring to historiographical tendencies and philosophical discourses on the use of history, the article presents a personal argument for the usefulness of the historian's craft today. Drawing on the research on violence, friendship, and silences in history, it would seem we need penetrating methods when examining the information and disinformation spread widely by the mass media and the Internet. Source-critical methodology is still valid in that context. It is equally vital to use comparisons over time to interpret and evaluate trends in the modern world regardless of whether the results are debated in critical or appreciative terms. We need to analyse premodern times to be able to refine the questions we raise in the face of modernity... (More)
Referring to historiographical tendencies and philosophical discourses on the use of history, the article presents a personal argument for the usefulness of the historian's craft today. Drawing on the research on violence, friendship, and silences in history, it would seem we need penetrating methods when examining the information and disinformation spread widely by the mass media and the Internet. Source-critical methodology is still valid in that context. It is equally vital to use comparisons over time to interpret and evaluate trends in the modern world regardless of whether the results are debated in critical or appreciative terms. We need to analyse premodern times to be able to refine the questions we raise in the face of modernity and postmodernity. Further, it may be. possible to deepen our knowledge of the existential and ethical conditions of mankind, if historians prove capable of handling a hermeneutic dialogue with the past in a subtle and creative way. Such conditions seem to a certain extent to be universal. For example, we need food and care to survive, we grow old and ultimately die, and we are normally social beings who try to collaborate or compete with others, and as such we try to establish groups or societies with certain common norms. Thus, although the cultural expressions of human dilemmas, emotions, values, and thoughts vary, there are things we can recognize and possibly understand about human beings in earlier periods. One of the advantages of a long-term historical perspective is the possibility of discovering changes and continuities, similarities and contrasts. Why not profit from such insights into the human condition throughout history, far beyond the limited 'here' and 'now' where we are situated? (Less)
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author
organization
publishing date
type
Contribution to journal
publication status
published
subject
keywords
historiography, critical use of history, temporal comparisons, humanology
in
Scandia
volume
79
issue
2
pages
125 - 135
publisher
Stiftelsen Scandia
external identifiers
  • wos:000327918900012
  • scopus:84891423639
ISSN
0036-5483
language
Swedish
LU publication?
yes
id
6751cc91-5882-44fe-af1c-cc3be8970fee (old id 4272644)
date added to LUP
2016-04-01 14:45:42
date last changed
2022-01-28 02:25:46
@article{6751cc91-5882-44fe-af1c-cc3be8970fee,
  abstract     = {{Referring to historiographical tendencies and philosophical discourses on the use of history, the article presents a personal argument for the usefulness of the historian's craft today. Drawing on the research on violence, friendship, and silences in history, it would seem we need penetrating methods when examining the information and disinformation spread widely by the mass media and the Internet. Source-critical methodology is still valid in that context. It is equally vital to use comparisons over time to interpret and evaluate trends in the modern world regardless of whether the results are debated in critical or appreciative terms. We need to analyse premodern times to be able to refine the questions we raise in the face of modernity and postmodernity. Further, it may be. possible to deepen our knowledge of the existential and ethical conditions of mankind, if historians prove capable of handling a hermeneutic dialogue with the past in a subtle and creative way. Such conditions seem to a certain extent to be universal. For example, we need food and care to survive, we grow old and ultimately die, and we are normally social beings who try to collaborate or compete with others, and as such we try to establish groups or societies with certain common norms. Thus, although the cultural expressions of human dilemmas, emotions, values, and thoughts vary, there are things we can recognize and possibly understand about human beings in earlier periods. One of the advantages of a long-term historical perspective is the possibility of discovering changes and continuities, similarities and contrasts. Why not profit from such insights into the human condition throughout history, far beyond the limited 'here' and 'now' where we are situated?}},
  author       = {{Österberg, Eva}},
  issn         = {{0036-5483}},
  keywords     = {{historiography; critical use of history; temporal comparisons; humanology}},
  language     = {{swe}},
  number       = {{2}},
  pages        = {{125--135}},
  publisher    = {{Stiftelsen Scandia}},
  series       = {{Scandia}},
  title        = {{Människokunskap och långa tidsaxlar}},
  volume       = {{79}},
  year         = {{2013}},
}