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Silencing the past: Power and the Production of History

Kenneth Maxwell, +1 more
- 01 Jan 1996 - 
- Vol. 75, Iss: 4, pp 152
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This article is published in Foreign Affairs.The article was published on 1996-01-01. It has received 1715 citations till now.

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Social Memory Studies: From “Collective Memory” to the Historical Sociology of Mnemonic Practices

TL;DR: Social memory studies is a nonparadigmatic, transdisciplinary, centerless enterprise as discussed by the authors, and despite substantial work in a variety of disciplines, substantive areas, and geographical contexts, social memory studies are a non paradigmatic and non-disciplinary enterprise.
Book

The Politics of the Governed: Reflections on Popular Politics in Most of the World

TL;DR: The Leonard Hastings Schoff Memorial Lectures 2001 as discussed by the authors The Nation in Heterogeneous TimePopulations and Political SocietyThe Politics of the GovernedGlobal/Local: Before and After September 11The Great PeaceBattle HymnThe Contradictions of SecularismAre Indian Cities Becoming Bourgeois At Last?
Journal ArticleDOI

Delinking : The rhetoric of modernity, the logic of coloniality and the grammar of de-coloniality

Walter D. Mignolo
- 01 Mar 2007 - 
TL;DR: The publisher does not give any warranty express or implied or make any representation that the contents will be complete or accurate or up to date as discussed by the authors, and the accuracy of any instructions, formulae and drug doses should be independently verified with primary sources.
Journal ArticleDOI

Colonial archives and the arts of governance

TL;DR: This article argued that scholars should view archives not as sites of knowledge retrieval, but of knowledge production, as monuments of states as well as states of state ethnography, and they need to move from archive-assource to archive-as-subject.
MonographDOI

Hegel, Haiti, and Universal History

TL;DR: Buck-Morss as mentioned in this paper draws new connections between history, inequality, social conflict, and human emancipation, and challenges us to widen the boundaries of our historical imagination by reinterpreting the master-slave dialectic.