ABSTRACT

Historical parallels, analogies, anachronisms and metaphors to the past play a crucial role in political speeches, historical narratives, iconography, movies and newspapers on a daily basis. They frame, articulate and represent a specific understanding of history and can be used not only to construct but also to rethink historical continuity. Almost-forgotten or sleeping history can be revived to legitimize an imagined future in a political discourse today.

History can hardly be neutral or factual because it depends on the historian’s, as well the people’s, perspective as to what kind of events and sources they combine to make history meaningful. Analysing historical analogies – as embedded in narratives and images of the past – enables us to understand how history and collective memory are managed and used for political purposes and to provide social orientation in time and space.

To rethink theories of history, iconology and collective memory, the authors of this volume discuss a variety of cases from Hong Kong, China and Europe.

chapter 1|11 pages

Introduction

Prefiguring future by constructing history

chapter 2|24 pages

Analogy, allegory and anachronism 1

chapter 4|28 pages

The tapestry of history

Parallels, analogies, metaphors 1

chapter 5|15 pages

Driving with the rearview mirror?

Historical analogies and European foreign policy

chapter 6|50 pages

Handing over memories

The transnationalization of memorials and the construction of collective memory in post-war and postcolonial Hong Kong

chapter 7|25 pages

The sieve of memory

Chinese coming to terms with the past and parallels in European cultures of remembrance