
Práticas da História No. 6
Sep 13, 2018 | 2018, Editions, Práticas da História

Práticas da História – Journal on Theory, Historiography and Uses of the Past
- 2018
- Issue 6
- ISSN: 2183-590X
- Special issue: The History of Hayden White
Excerpt from the editorial:
The homage the present issue embodies is far from an original gesture, or even one that would have to wait for Hayden White’s death. Since the 1990s, White and his academic trajectory have been the object of a number of tributes.10 On this occasion, we challenged a group of co-leagues from different countries to engage with one of the many essays penned by White throughout his career. We asked them to comment that specific essay as they saw fit, namely by exploring the way White questions their own field or line of research (as Paul-Arthur Tortosa does, within the frame of the History of Medicine) or exploring the relations between White and other authors – in some cases, classical authors (such as Vico, by Maria-Benedita Basto, and Freud, by Nancy Partner), in others, contemporary with White (such as Paul Ricoeur, brought to this issue by João Luís Lisboa, and Frederic Jameson, by Luís Trindade, or Dominick LaCapra, by Rui Bebiano).
To make White’s essays the topic or motto for the issue’s contributions was not an innocent choice. As previously mentioned, he was the author of one of the most influential History books ever published, Metahistory: The Historical Imagination in Nineteenth-century Europe, whose 40th anniversary was recently acknowledged in different parts of the world (see, for instance, the book Metahistoria: 40 años después. Ensayos en homenaje a Hayden White, edited by Aitor Bolanõs de Miguel, who also happens to participate in this same issue). But White’s interventions in the field of theory of History were not limited to monographs. In fact, most of his work was first published in journals or as chapters in collective works.12 As a counterpoint to this dispersion, from time to time he published works such as Tropics of Discourse. Essays in Cultural Criticism (1978), The Content of the Form: Narrative Discourse and Historical Representation (1987), Figural Realism. Studies in the Mimesis Effect (1999) and The Practical Past (2015). The Fiction of Narrative – Essays on History, Literature, and Theory (2010), mentioned earlier, is a collection of White’s essays selected by Robert Doran with a biographically-structured anthological purpose.14 The same anthological principle presides over White’s essay collections published in languages other than his native English. Such is the case with Forme di storia: dalla realtà alla narrazione, published in Italian in 2006, Proza historyczna, published in Polish in 2009, or, more recently, L’Histoire s’écrit, published in French. The texts that the organisers of those works sign in the issue of our journal – respectively, Eduardo Tortarolo, Ewa Domanska and Philippe Carrard – bring to light some of these editorial processes and their relation with the historiographical cultures of the countries where these anthologies were published.
There is a well-established genealogy of the essay as a genre – or, we could also say, as an anti-genre – that can be traced back from Lukács to Montaigne, for example.16 The point here is not to re-trace or extend this particular topic. And the place of the essay as a form in White’s work also has been acknowledged, among others, by LaCapra, Richard Vann and Robert Doran. I would just like to add that the choice of White’s essays as the starting point for the various contributions we gather in this budding academic journal also springs from our will to insist on the need to problematize what is implied in the modes of production historians nowadays are subjected, or subject themselves, to. Some of the conceptions of the discipline of History and of historical time itself that we have attributed to White in the previous paragraphs seem to fit uneasily with the conventions of writing and academic publishing that currently prevail within social sciences and humanities. Those conceptions rather bring to our mind a text of T. W. Adorno originally published in German in 1958, in which he exalts the untimely nature of the essay. It is with Adorno’s words in «The essay as form» that we conclude: «The usual reproach against the essay, that it is fragmentary and random, itself assumes the giveness of totality and thereby the identity of subject and object, and it suggests that man is in control of totality. But the desire of the essay is not to seek and filter the eternal out of the transitory; it wants, rather, to make the transitory eternal. Its weakness testifies to the non-identity that it has to express, as well as to that excess of intention over its object, and thereby it points to that utopia which is blocked out by the classification of the world into the eternal and the transitory. In the emphatic essay, thought gets rid of the traditional idea of truth.»
José Neves (IHC — NOVA FCSH)
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Detalhes do Evento
Launch of the third book in the Estratégica collection by Imprensa de História Contemporânea [IHC Press], on censorship, coordinated by Rita Luís
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Detalhes do Evento
Launch of the third book in the Estratégica collection by Imprensa de História Contemporânea [IHC Press], on censorship, coordinated by Rita Luís and Adalberto Fernandes. Presentation by Carla Baptista and José Bragança de Miranda at Livraria Tigre de Papel bookstore in Lisbon.
Censura: o que nos falta perguntar?
Censura: o que nos falta perguntar? Estabelece um diálogo para o desenvolvimento dos estudos sobre censura. Abordando temas em que a distinção entre a censura e outras formas de regulação é problematizada, questiona-se a função do discurso sobre a pornografia na construção do Estado-nação italiano, a chamada “cultura de cancelamento”, ou a função da moderação em ambiente digital em contextos democráticos marcados por discursos de ódio. Discutem-se ainda estudos que analisam processos censórios que extravasam a noção estrita de censura associada ao poder dos estados nacionais, analisando o papel da diplomacia na censura transnacional do cinema ou as contradições de uma “censura oficiosa” do jazz durante o regime franquista. O livro inclui entrevistas a Nicole Moore e Robert Darnton, cujos trabalhos recentes contribuem para criticar uma abordagem à censura enquanto força puramente negativa.
Este livro é resultado do projeto exploratório “CEMA – Censura(s): um modelo analítico de processos censórios no campo dos estudos sobre censura em Portugal”, desenvolvido no Instituto de História Contemporânea e financiado pela Fundação para a Ciência e Tecnologia, sob coordenação de Rita Luís e com participação de Adalberto Fernandes, coordenadores da presente obra.
Sobre os coordenadores:
Rita Luís é investigadora no Instituto de História Contemporânea da Universidade Nova de Lisboa e no Laboratório associado IN2PAST. No IHC, coordena o grupo de investigação Cultura – Poder, Mediações e Arte e desenvolve um projeto sobre Entangled Iberian Censorship (CEECIND/02813/2017), com o qual obteve a Fellowship François Chevallier, na Casa Velázquez em Madrid em 2022. Foi investigadora responsável pelo projeto coletivo Censura(s): um modelo analítico de processos censórios (EXPL/COM-OUT/0831/2021), financiado pela FCT. Publica sobre história dos mass media no contexto das ditaduras ibéricas do século XX, focando-se na relação entre jornalismo e política, mas também nos fenómenos censórios, nos fluxos transnacionais e de transferência cultural, característicos da cultura audiovisual.
Adalberto Fernandes é doutorado em Filosofia pela Universidade de Lisboa com uma tese sobre Michel Foucault, mestre em comunicação e mestre em bioética. Colaborador do Instituto de História Contemporânea, foi investigador no Centro de Filosofia das Ciências da Universidade de Lisboa. Publicou 13 artigos e capítulos e fez 19 apresentações nos temas de comunicação política, filosofia política, biopolítica, soft power, processos participativos, media, jornalismo, ética da comunicação, comunicação de ciência, comunicação de saúde e bioética.
Tempo
(Quinta-feira) 6:00 pm - 7:30 pm
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IHC Press and Tigre de Papel Bookstore
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