| I. Epistemological Issues: The Liaisons
Between History and Memory
|
| 35 |
Memory and the Writing of History |
Consuelo Varela |
| 43 |
Ancestral Memory, Homestead Symbols and Clan History: Analysis of the Shanxi
Hongdong Big Locust Tree Legend |
Zhao Shiyu |
| 75 |
History, Memory, and Narrative Ethics |
Vivian-Lee Nyitray |
II. Questions of Method: On the Sources of History and Towards an Interdisciplinary Approach
|
| 91 |
A Global Inquisition and the Aborigines |
Juan Gil |
| 107 |
Documents, Interviews, and Facts: The Case Study of the Yihetuan Movement
in the Connection Between History and Memory |
Chen Fangchung |
| 145 |
Science, Culture, Politics: Qing Intellectual History in Republican China |
Shana J. Brown |
| 163 |
History and the Transmission of Shared Loss: The Great Leap Famine in China and the Luku Incident in Taiwan |
Stephan Feuchtwang |
| 191 |
Old Photos and Historic Memory |
Ding Dong |
| 203 |
Forbidden Memory, Unwritten History:
The Difficulty in Structuring an Opposition Movement in the PRC |
Jean-Philippe Béja |
III. Selecting and Constructing Memories |
| 227 |
Commemorating History in Colonial
and Post-Colonial Hong Kong |
John M. Carroll |
| 251 |
The Objectivity of Historical Memory: On Reality in the Panorama of the History of Ideas |
Jin Guantao & Liu Qingfeng |
| 271 |
Interaction Between Historical Archives and TV:
Taking "Retrospection: Stories in the Archives" as an Example |
Xing Jianrong |
| 283 |
Interpreting Memory as Acting on Memory:
Ethnic Identity in Macao During the Transition Period (1987-1999) |
João de Pina-Cabral |
| 297 |
Seeking Footprints of Early Chinese Labourers:
Based on Sister M. Alfreda Elsensohns' Idaho Chinese Lore |
Zhang Kaiyuan |
| 313 |
National History Textbooks in Late Qing China:
Stories, Memories and Identities |
Peter Zarrow |
IV. Preserving Memory and Teaching History |
| 339 |
Remembering the Past, Shaping the Future:
Stories Focussed on Personal Objects |
Haviva Peled-Carmeli |
| 349 |
Valuing the Past in the Museum of Macau |
Cathryn Clayton |
| 373 |
Historical Understanding and Historical Reality:
Unconformity, Interference and Mistakes in the Historical View of Evolutionism in Research on the
History of Chinese Art in the Twentieth Century |
Lin Mu |
| 393 |
The Establishment of the “China Historical
Geographic Information System” and Its Use in Historical Research |
Ge Jianxiong |
| 409 |
Information Technology and the Job
of the Historian: An Outline of Ongoing Issues |
Guido Abbattista |
| 425 |
The Future of Free Information |
Lawrence M. Sanger |
V. The "Duty of Memory": For Whom and to What End |
| 447 |
The Chinese Cultural Revolution: Concealed History and To-be-discovered Memory |
Xu Youyu |
| 461 |
How a “Lost Generation” Recovers its Memory:
The Political Significance of the Debate about the Memory of the Cultural Revolution and of the Educated Youth Movement |
Michel Bonnin |
| 471 |
Can We Influence Memory? |
Marie-Claire Lavabre |
| 477 |
The Duty of Memory: The Nanjing Massacre,
Memory and Forgetting in China and Japan |
Rana Mitter |
| 495 |
The French Resistance: Between Memory and History |
Olivier Wieviorka |
| 513 |
Representing and Remembering the Soweto
Uprising:
Constructing the Narrative of South Africa's Liberation Struggle |
Gary Baines |
| 533 |
S 21: The "Present Past" of Dehumanisation |
Sylvie Rollet |
| 541 |
Index |
|
| 551 |
Acknowledgments |
|