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  1. L’histoire culturelle et ses voisins.Peter Burke & Brigitte Rollet - 2019 - Diogène n° 258-259-258 (2-4):12-24.
    Cet article porte sur les concepts que les historiens ont empruntés, en les adaptant, aux disciplines voisines ces dernières décennies, plutôt que sur ceux qu’ils leur ont prêtés (phénomène rarissime). Il étudie le « virage social » des années soixante, l’intérêt pour l’anthropologie historique et la psycho-histoire (qui s’appuie sur la psychanalyse) dans les années soixante-dix, le tournant littéraire dans les années quatre-vingt (qui va de la poétique de l’histoire à l’analyse des archives comme fiction), l’histoire de la mémoire sociale (...)
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  • Psychoanalysis and the antinomies of an archaeologist: Andrea Carandini, the ruins of Rome, and the writing of history.Tom McCaskie - 2021 - History of the Human Sciences 34 (3-4):49-75.
    Freud’s fascination with the ruins of ancient Rome was an element in the formation and development of psychology. This article concerns the intersection of psychoanalysis with archaeology and history in the study of that city. Its substantive content is an analysis of the life and career of Andrea Carandini, the best-known Roman archaeologist of the past 40 years. He has said and written much about his changing views of himself and about what he is trying to do in his approach (...)
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  • Cultural history: an interdisciplinary approach.Peter Burke - 2024 - Diogenes 65 (1):87-96.
    This article concentrates on what historians have borrowed and adapted from neighbouring disciplines in the last few decades, rather than what they have lent (much more rarely). It discusses the ‘social turn’ of the 1960s, the movements for historical anthropology and ‘psychohistory (drawing on psychoanalysis) in the 1970s, the literary turn of the 1980s (ranging from the poetics of history to the analysis of ‘fiction in the archives’), the history of ‘social’ or ‘cultural’ memory, the rise of the history of (...)
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  • Considering Emma.Clare Hemmings - 2013 - European Journal of Women's Studies 20 (4):334-346.
    This article considers the importance of the anarchist thinker and activist Emma Goldman for contemporary feminist theory and politics. Initially concerned with how Goldman’s views on power and change help us reconsider our own history and present, the author shifts gears in the course of the article to think aspects of her thought that are less easily reclaimed. Exploring her own and others’ desire for Goldman to resolve current difficulties within and beyond feminism, the author highlights the problems this desire (...)
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