The Past is a Foreign CountryCambridge University Press, 14 nov 1985 - 489 pagina's In this remarkably wide-ranging book Professor Lowenthal analyses the ever-changing role of the past in shaping our lives. A heritage at once nurturing and burdensome, the past allows us to make sense of the present whilst imposing powerful constraints upon the way that present develops. Some aspects of the past are celebrated, others expunged, as each generation reshapes its legacy in line with current needs. Drawing on all the arts, the humanities and the social sciences, the author uses sources as diverse as science fiction and psychoanalysis to examine how rebellion against inherited tradition has given rise to the modern cult of preservation and pervasive nostalgia. Profusely illustrated, The Past is a Foreign Country shows that although the past has ceased to be a sanction for inherited power or privilege, as a focus of personal and national identity and as a bulwark against massive and distressing change it remains as potent a force as ever in human affairs. |
Inhoudsopgave
RELIVING THE PAST DREAMS AND NIGHTMARES | 3 |
NOSTALGIA | 4 |
REPOSSESSING THE PAST | 13 |
GOALS IN THE REVISITED PAST | 21 |
RISKS OF REVISITING THE PAST | 28 |
BENEFITS AND BURDENS OF THE PAST | 35 |
BENEFITS | 36 |
VALUED ATTRIBUTES | 52 |
THE PAST AS EXPERIENCED AND BELIEVED | 187 |
MEMORY | 193 |
HISTORY | 210 |
RELICS | 238 |
INTERCONNECTIONS | 249 |
CHANGING THE PAST | 261 |
CHANGING THE PAST | 263 |
ALTERING RELICS | 265 |
THREATS AND EVILS | 63 |
TRADITION AND INNOVATION | 69 |
ANCIENTS VS MODERNS | 74 |
THE RENAISSANCE AND THE CLASSICAL HERITAGE | 75 |
FROM THE QUERELLE TO THE ENLIGHTENMENT | 87 |
VICTORIAN BRITAIN | 96 |
AMERICAN FOUNDING FATHERS AND SONS | 105 |
THE LOOK OF AGE | 125 |
DISTASTE FOR AGE | 127 |
APPRECIATING THE LOOK OF AGE | 148 |
KNOWING THE PAST | 183 |
HOW WE KNOW THE PAST | 185 |
ADDING TO RELICS | 290 |
WHY WE CHANGE THE PAST | 324 |
CREATIVE ANACHRONISM | 363 |
DEATH AND ENDURANCE OF THE PAST | 364 |
PASTS WE HAVE LOST | 369 |
CONSEQUENCES OF THE LOST PAST | 376 |
PRESERVATION | 384 |
PASTS WE HAVE GAINED | 407 |
CONCLUSION | 410 |
| 413 | |
| 471 | |
Overige edities - Alles bekijken
Veelvoorkomende woorden en zinsdelen
admired alter American anachronisms ancient Ancient Greece antiquity Archaeology architecture artifacts authentic awareness beauty become Britain British buildings bygone Cathedral century Chapter classical classical antiquity conservation continuity culture dead decay E. A. Freeman eighteenth-century Elgin Marbles England English epochs experience faith fathers feel felt fiction fragments Freud George George Perkins Marsh Gothic Gothic Revival Greek Henry heritage historians houses human humanists identity images imagination imitation inherited John knowledge landscape less living London look medieval memory modern monuments Museum National National Trust nature nineteenth nineteenth-century nostalgia nostalgic old age original paintings past's patina Patricide perspectives Petrarch Pompeo Batoni precursors preservation quoted re-enactments recall recent recollections records reflect relics remains remember remote Renaissance replicas restoration Revival Revolution Roman Rome ruins Ruskin scenes sculpture seems senescence sense Society stone Stonehenge surviving tangible heritage taste things thought tourist tradition University Press Victorian visitors York youth
Verwijzingen naar dit boek
Globalization: Social Theory and Global Culture Professor Roland Robertson Geen voorbeeld beschikbaar - 1992 |
Territories, Boundaries and Consciousness: The Changing Geographies of the ... Anssi Paasi Fragmentweergave - 1996 |

