Results for ' historical revisionism (negationism)'

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  1.  12
    Politics of memory, historical revisionism, and negationism in postsocialist Serbia.Marko Skoric & Milivoj Beslin - 2017 - Filozofija I Društvo 28 (3):631-649.
    This paper explores the phenomenon of revisionism in historiography, while focusing in particular on illegitimate revisionism and negationism. It is indisputably true that historiography must be subject to constant revisions. Like all scientific theories, it needs to be characterized by a sort of?conservative? openness towards new ideas; however, revisions and negations are often put forward without scientific grounding. They reject the well-established historiographical methods, while opening themselves to various kinds of ideologies, biases and manipulations. The paper further (...)
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    The Women’s International War Crimes Tribunal (Tokyo, 2000): a feminist answer to historical revisionism[REVIEW]Christine Lévy - 2014 - Clio 39:129-150.
    The article examines the emergence in the 1990s of the issue of “Comfort women” and the conditions that led to the holding of The Women’s International War Crimes Tribunal for the Trial of Japan’s Military Sexual Slavery. It argues that it was a response both to victims’ needs and to the prevailing revisionism concerning the violence committed during the Asian-Pacific war by the Japanese army, which had been the subject of the Tokyo war crimes trials of 1946-1948. The women’s (...)
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    Revisionism in the Twentieth Century: A Bankrupt Concept or Permanent Practice?Evi Gkotzaridis - 2008 - The European Legacy 13 (6):725-741.
    Written in the wake of a critical incident which the author considers worrying and yet characteristic of the times we live in, this article contends that the conflation heretofore evident between critical historical thinking (revisionism) and negationism is ultimately harmful to the historical discipline since it can serve the interests of the deniers and indirectly grant an argument to radical postmodernists who demote history to a loosely constructed form of personal fiction. On the other hand, it (...)
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