The Historian between the Quest for the Universal and the Quest for Identity

Diogenes 42 (168):51-63 (1994)
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Abstract

It might be best to begin this discussion of the historian's predicament with a concrete experience. In the early summer of 1944, as the German army retreated northwards in Italy to establish a more defensible front against the advancing Allied forces along the so-called “Gothic Line” in the Appenines, its units carried out a number of massacres, usually justified as reprisals against local “bandit” (i.e., partisan) activity. Fifty years later some of these village massacres in the province of Arezzo, hitherto left to the memories of the villages’ own survivors and the local historians of the Resistance, provided the occasion for an international conference on the memory of German massacres in World War II.

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Citations of this work

History, memory, identity.Allan Megill - 1998 - History of the Human Sciences 11 (3):37-62.

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References found in this work

Avant-propos.[author unknown] - 1946 - Revue de Philosophie:5.
Avant-propos.[author unknown] - 1998 - Rue Descartes 20:7-8.
Avant-propos.[author unknown] - 2006 - Études Phénoménologiques 22 (43/44):3-3.

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