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Social Knowledge and Experience in Museum Practice Social Knowledge and Experience in Museum Practice
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Archives: Cultural Context and Political Experience Archives: Cultural Context and Political Experience
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Experience, the Internet, and Different Histories Experience, the Internet, and Different Histories
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Knowledge through Sharing and Interdisciplinarity Knowledge through Sharing and Interdisciplinarity
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Material Culture Creating Different Histories Material Culture Creating Different Histories
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People Making History: “Doing Family History” People Making History: “Doing Family History”
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Academic Responses Academic Responses
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Different Approaches to Knowledge Creation Different Approaches to Knowledge Creation
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Notes Notes
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Bibliography Bibliography
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22 Public History as a Social Form of Knowledge
Get accessHilda Kean is a history professor at the University of Greenwich and honorary senior researcher at University College London. Her many books include Animal Rights: Political and Social Change in Britain since 1800, People and Their Pasts (with Paul Ashton), The Public History Reader (with Paul Martin), and The Great Cat and Dog Massacre: The Real Story of World War Two’s Unknown Tragedy.
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Published:05 October 2017
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Abstract
This chapter argues that history is not a given, but a construction involving choices drawn from materials garnered from the past and made by different individuals, institutions, nations, and communities that change over time. It focuses on the process whereby materials, in and outside the archive, representing traces of the past, become appropriated into histories. This approaches emphasizes knowledge as a social construction that embodies experience. An interdisciplinary and collaborative approach may provide us with new ways of understanding the past—and the present—by exploring, for example, the ways in which family histories and those of political campaigns, such as women’s suffrage, are developed. By opening the categorization of those making history (“the who”), the epistemology (“the what”) can also change.
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