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Number of results: 14
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Abstract

This article discusses recently published conference papers Memory and Politics of History. Expeciemed by Poland and her Neighbors.
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Authors and Affiliations

Jakub Muchowski
ORCID: ORCID
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Abstract

In this article, I will sketch a particular way of thinking about existence in time, the consequence of which would be practicing historiography as a response to the voices of the dead coming from the past. This theoretical conception of history tries to understand history not so much as an unfolding process of succession over time but as some community of the living and the dead. If the voices of the dead, defined in terms of spectrality, are to be active somehow in the present, they cannot be prematurely suppressed by gestures of closing the past understood as blocking the transmission of these voices to the future. After analyzing the problem of false closures in history, I am trying to understand spectrality that would combine both past and present activity. The article aims to propose tasks for a historiography that would consist in regaining in con-temporary culture the ability to hear the voice, the gaze, and the expectations coming from the past, present in various forms which can be grasped by an encompassing notion of spectrality. Reflection on spectrality brings us closer to the meaning of the concept of counter‑time.
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Authors and Affiliations

Maciej Bugajewski
1
ORCID: ORCID

  1. Adam Mickiewicz University, Poznań
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Abstract

The Author presents the core of the idea of microhistory as developed in the works of Giovanni Levi and the group of Italian historians connected with the periodical "Quaderni Storici".
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Authors and Affiliations

Krystian Górzan
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Abstract

This is a review article of Herman Paul's Masks of Meaning, Existentialist Humanism in Hayden Whites Philosophy of History. Paul's book is claimed to be a successful attempt to comprehend White's oeuvre as a whole. The author presents its structure and indicates the major arguments as well as some minor flaws, which however do not affect the merits that the book provides.
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Authors and Affiliations

Marcin Moskalewicz
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Abstract

The conversation concerns mayor questions in the theory of historical writing, both raised or elaborated in Hayden White’s work. It focuses on the relation between history and its closest others: science and literature, as well as the issue of the function of history. Conversation includes the discussion of the concepts of fiction, figure, fulfillment, figurative and conceptual language, modernism.
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Authors and Affiliations

Jakub Muchowski
ORCID: ORCID
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Abstract

The conversation concerns mayor questions in the theory of historical writing, both raised or elaborated in Hayden White’s work. It focuses on the relation between history and its closest others: science and literature, as well as the issue of the function of historical studies. Conversation includes the discussion of the concepts of fiction, figure, fullfillment, figurative and conceptual language, modernism.

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Authors and Affiliations

Jakub Muchowski
ORCID: ORCID
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Abstract

The aim of this paper is to partially capture the state of theoretical debate amongst Polish historians on their own discipline in the second half of 20th century. To achieve this we analyse the content of the first twenty five volumes of journal Historyka published in the period when Celina Bobińska was its editor-in-chief (1967–1995). We assume that Historyka – the only journal dedicated to the theory of history and history of historiography – was situated in the centre of exchanges on academic historical practices. We do not treat its content as a reflection of contemporary studies in the theory of history, but as a dominant position in the self-understanding of the discipline competing with other utterances. The paper is a reconstruction of this offer, which is composed of the definitions of subjects of historical studies, descriptions of productive methods, hierarchy of masters of historical writings and their influential books.

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Authors and Affiliations

Jakub Muchowski
ORCID: ORCID
Rafał Swakoń
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Abstract

Since the so‑called “bodily turn” in the humanities, it may pass as trivial that, as observed by Alva Noë, “experience is not a passive interior state, but a mode of active engagement with the world”. Nevertheless, it seems worth repeating especially that the most direct implication of this thought – that when humans actively engage with the world they do so by moving their physical bodies around – has apparently penetrated much less. This is especially true in the case of academic disciplines involved in the study of the past – history and archaeology – which seem unprepared to investigate past embodiment in a comprehensive manner.
Hence, a new methodological proposition is put forth – archaeology of motion. It is inspired by anthropologists and ethnographers’ successful adaptation of participatory observation and auto-‑ethnography to the study of embodied practices. It makes use of embodied research advocated by Ben Spatz as well as insights from ecological psychology of James J. Gibson and its various off‑shoots in order to propose a positive research programme for studies in past bodily motion. The paper is capstoned with a short account of a case study on a forgotten Polish folk wrestling style where the proposed theory was put into practice.
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Authors and Affiliations

Maciej Talaga
1
ORCID: ORCID
Jakub Wrzalik
2
Krzysztof Janus
2

  1. Faculty “Artes Liberales”, University of Warsaw
  2. Warsaw Study Group, Association for Renaissance Martial Arts ARMA‑PL
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Abstract

In this interview, Professor Estêvão de Rezende Martins, an emeritus professor at the University of Brasilia, discusses his intellectual journey and research interests in the theory, philosophy, and methodology of history and historiography. The conversation delves into the development of historical thinking and consciousness, exploring how human existence is inherently historical and how individuals relate to their experiences through cognitive operations and historical culture. Moreover, the interview explores the evolution of the theory of history in Brazil, emphasising the shift from the speculative reflections of the philosophy of history to the meth-odological rigour of the theory of history or epistemology of history. The role of academic historiography in the face of contemporary challenges, such as the recognition of non‑human or post‑human planetary agencies, is also addressed. Martins discusses the diversification of his-toriography and its autonomy in exploring previously neglected topics, along with the need for historical education to empower individuals to think independently and critically in our border-less, globalised world. Ultimately, the interview sheds light on the ongoing theoretical experi-mentation in the field of history and the potential impact on historiographical practice in the future.
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Authors and Affiliations

Hugo R. Merlo
1
ORCID: ORCID

  1. Uniwersytet Adama Mickiewicza w Poznaniu
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Abstract

Analytic philosophy is sometimes understood in opposition to continental tradition. In this article, I would like to show that a Lviv‑Warsaw School shared many fundamental traits with analytic orientation. In afterwar Poland, this tradition clashed with the dialectical materialism that lacks strong scientific tradition but had the full support of the communist party. This situation produced a unique scenario in which the methodology of science could strive as a mainstream area. A crucial role was attributed to the theory of history.
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Authors and Affiliations

Piotr Kowalewski Jahromi
1

  1. Silesian University, Katowice
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Abstract

This article analyses the first traces of postsecular turn in historical theory, arguing that they first emerged in Dominick LaCapra’s book History and Its Limits: Human, Animal, Violence (2009) and in Allan Megill’s subsequent polemic with that work. The author claims that what prevails in LaCapra’s narrative is the rhetoric of “resisting apocalypse”, thus demonstrating how he inscribes postsecular themes with the issue of trauma, together with its religious connotations. The discussion between LaCapra and Megill is treated here as a point of departure for considering the forms that the postsecular can take in historical theory.

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Authors and Affiliations

Tomasz Wiśniewski
ORCID: ORCID
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Abstract

The aim of this article is to present Jerzy Topolski's vision of historiography and the ways of practicing it.
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Bibliography

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Kula, Witold. Problemy i metody historii gospodarczej, wyd. II. Warszawa: Państwowe Wydawnictwo Naukowe, 1983.
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Stobiecki, Rafał. „Jerzy Topolski (1928–1998). Marksista, który miał odwagę różnić się od innych”. W Rafał Stobiecki, Historycy polscy wobec wyzwań XX wieku, 341–374. Poznań: Wydawnictwo Nauka i Innowacje, 2014.
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Topolska, Maria D. „Bibliografia prac Jerzego Topolskiego za lata 1951–1987”. W Między historią a teorią. Refleksje nad problematyką dziejów i wiedzy historycznej, red. Marian Drozdowski, 66–133. Warszawa–Poznań: Państwowe Wydawnictwo Naukowe, 1988.
Topolski, Jerzy. „Historia historiografii wobec wyzwań linguistic turn”. W Metodologiczne problemy syntezy historii historiografii polskiej, red. Jerzy Maternicki, 39–48. Rzeszów: Wydawnictwo Uniwersytetu Rzeszowskiego, 1998.
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Topolski, Jerzy. Metodologia historii, wyd. II. Warszawa: Państwowe Wydawnictwo Naukowe, 1973.
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Wrzosek, Wojciech. „Jerzy Topolski 1928–1998”. W Wybitni historycy wielkopolscy, red. Jerzy Strzelczyk, 643–644. Poznań: Wydawnictwo Poznańskie, 2010.
Wrzosek, Wojciech. „Szkic do portretu Jerzego Topolskiego”. W Jerzy Topolski, Varia historyczne, wstęp i dobór tekstów Wojciech Wrzosek, 9–30. Poznań: Poznańskie Towarzystwo Przyjaciół Nauk, 2010.
Zamorski, Krzysztof. „Potrzeby badań nad historią gospodarczą”. W Metodologiczne problemy syntezy historii historiografii polskiej, red. Jerzy Maternicki, 251–264. Rzeszów: Wydawnictwo Uniwersytetu Rzeszowskiego, 1998.
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Authors and Affiliations

Rafał Stobiecki
1
ORCID: ORCID

  1. Katedra Historii Historiografii i Nauk Pomocniczych Historii, Instytut Historii Uniwersytetu Łódzkiego
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Abstract

In this interview, conducted during the XXIII International Congress of Historical Sciences in Poznań (2022), Olufunke Adeboye (Professor of Social History at the University of Lagos, Nigeria) discusses the problems of decolonisation of African history, the relations between academic historiography and popular history, new trends in historical writing, the importance of theory for historical research, and the problems of historical education in Nigeria.
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Authors and Affiliations

Ewa Domańska
1
ORCID: ORCID

  1. Uniwersytet im. Adama Mickiewicza w Poznaniu
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Abstract

The article presents the person of Janusz Ballenstedt (1929–2005), a Cracow architect, whom twists of fate relocated to French circles. He was the designer of significant buildings in Poland, a man of great knowledge, skilful in his use of the pen. He transferred his thoughts regarding the all-encompassing viewing of architecture to paper. A valuable book, titled “Architecture – Theory and History” (PWN 2000) was written. The article is focused on J. Ballenstedt’s earlier unpublished work, a manifesto of the architect, titled Theory of Minimum in Architecture.
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Authors and Affiliations

Krzysztof J. Lenartowicz

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