ABSTRACT

This interdisciplinary collection considers public and popular history within a global framework, seeking to understand considerations of local, domestic histories and the ways they interact with broader discourses. Grounded in particular local and national situations, the book addresses the issues associated with popular history in a globalised cultural world, such as: how the study of popular history might work in the future; new ways in which the terms ‘popular’ and ‘public’ might inform one another and nuance scholarship; transnational, intercultural models of ‘pastness’; cultural translatability; and the demand for high-quality work on new technologies and history.

A wide range of international contributors consider a broad selection of locale and media, from American television and Canadian heritage to the representation of history in contemporary Chinese culture. They consider the way in which the study of public or popular texts invoke multiple historiographies, and demonstrate our need to think about public and popular aspects of the past in new, ‘emerging’ locales, such as China, Eastern Europe and South America.

This book was originally published as a special issue of the journal Rethinking History.

chapter |4 pages

Introduction

chapter |13 pages

Intervention

Public women and public history: revolution, prostitution and testimony in Cuba

chapter |11 pages

Intervention

Some thoughts on the problem of ‘popular/public history' in China

chapter |10 pages

Intervention

Hacking history, from analogue to digital and back again