Cover image for Who owns history? : rethinking the past in a changing world
Title:
Who owns history? : rethinking the past in a changing world
Author:
Foner, Eric.
ISBN:
9780809097043

9780809097050
Personal Author:
Edition:
1st ed.
Publication Information:
New York : Hill and Wang, 2002.
Physical Description:
xix, 233 p. ; 22 cm.
Contents:
Pt. I. The Politics of History and Historians -- 1. My Life as a Historian -- 2. The Education of Richard Hofstadter -- Pt. II. Rethinking History in a Changing World -- 3. American Freedom in a Global Age -- 4. The Russians Write a New History -- 5. "We Must Forget the Past": History in the New South Africa -- 6. Why Is There No Socialism in the United States? -- Pt. III. The Enduring Civil War -- 7. Who Is an American? -- 8. Blacks and the U.S. Constitution -- 9. Ken Burns and the Romance of Reunion.
Abstract:
""History," wrote James Baldwin, "does not refer merely, or even principally, to the past. On the contrary, the great force of history comes from the fact that we carry it within us, are unconsciously controlled by it in many ways, and history is literally present in all that we do."" "Rarely has Baldwin's insight been more forcefully confirmed than in our current conflict-ridden times. History itself has become a matter of public controversy as Americans clash over the way it is represented in museums, in the flying of the Confederate flag, or in the proposals for paying reparations for slavery. So whose history is being written? Who owns it?".

"In Who Owns History? Eric Foner proposes his answers to these and other questions about the historian's relationship to the world of the past and the future. He reconsiders his own earlier ideas and those of the pathbreaking historian Richard Hofstadter. He also examines international changes during the past two decades - globalization, the collapse of the Soviet Union, the end of apartheid in South Africa - and their effects on historical consciousness. He concludes with new considerations of the enduring but often misunderstood legacies of slavery, the Civil War, and Reconstruction."--BOOK JACKET.
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