Browsing by Subject "Collective memory"
Now showing items 1-6 of 6
-
Big Data and Public History
(F. Clavert, L. Wieneke, "Big Data and Public History", in Handbook of Digital Public History, Berlin, Boston: De Gruyter Oldenbourg, 2022, pp. 447-458, 2022)In this chapter, we define big data in history in three ways: (1) big data implies the use of an amount of data that the historian’s personal computer cannot deal with; (2) the data historians are using must be either ... -
Panel 11C – Itinerari di genere
(AIPH - Associazione Italiana di Public History, 2025)Il panel raccoglie una serie di interventi che si muovono lungo “itinerari di genere” molto eterogenei, che prendono in carico e discutono operazioni di ricostruzione storica, o raccolte di “storie”, pensate per pubblici ... -
Teresa Pàmies' letters of exile: from individual to collective memory
(2021)Since the end of the Spanish Civil War (1936-1939), the violence practiced against the vencidos by Franco’s troops imposed the displacement as a way of life on so many Republicans, among whom there was the young activist ... -
The Memorial Afterlives of Online Crowdsourcing: ‘Lives of the First World War’ at Imperial War Museums
(A-M. Foster, J. Wallis, The Memorial Afterlives of Online Crowdsourcing: ‘Lives of the First World War’ at Imperial War Museums, «Public History Review», 30 (2023), pp. 89-104, 2023)From May 2014 to March 2019 the Imperial War Museums launched a large-scale digital crowdsourcing project, ‘Lives of the First World War’. ‘Lives’ melded official and unofficial datasets to create an integrated database ... -
Transnationalism and Universalism of the Memory Tourism of the Great War
(2020)Thanks to the Centenary, a renewed interest has undoubtedly affected the landscapes of the memory of the First World War, moving away from the aims of past patriotic pilgrimages because it includes different perspectives. ... -
Use and Abuse of History and Memory: the Istrian-Dalmatian Exodus and the Current Refugee Flows
(2017)After the World War II, about 300.000 Italian people abandoned Istria and Dalmatia, which were annexed by Yugoslavia, and moved to Italy. The exodus is tied to the atrocities committed by the Slavic forces, the so called ...



