Representing Communism After the Fall [electronic resource] : Discourse, Memory, and Historical Redress / by Cristian Tileagă.

Por: Tileagă, Cristian [author.]Colaborador(es): SpringerLink (Online service)Tipo de material: TextoTextoSeries Palgrave Studies in Discursive PsychologyEditor: Cham : Springer International Publishing : Imprint: Palgrave Macmillan, 2018Edición: 1st ed. 2018Descripción: X, 262 p. online resourceTipo de contenido: text Tipo de medio: computer Tipo de portador: online resourceISBN: 9783319973944Tema(s): Community psychology | Environmental psychology | Discourse analysis | Personality | Social psychology | Psycholinguistics | Historiography | Political sociology | Community and Environmental Psychology | Discourse Analysis | Personality and Social Psychology | Psycholinguistics | Memory Studies | Political SociologyFormatos físicos adicionales: Printed edition:: Sin título; Printed edition:: Sin título; Printed edition:: Sin títuloClasificación CDD: 155.9 Clasificación LoC:RA790.55BF353Recursos en línea: Libro electrónicoTexto
Contenidos:
Preface -- Introduction: what does coming to terms with the past mean? -- 1. Transitional justice as situated practices -- 2. Collective and cultural memory: ethics, politics, and avoidance in remembering communism -- 3. Communism as moral problem -- 4. Communism as Other -- 5. Mea culpa -- 6. Remembering with and through archives -- 7. Transgression and the social construction of moral meanings -- 8. Using discursive psychology to explore contested and troubled pasts.
En: Springer Nature eBookResumen: This book explores the contribution of discursive psychology and discourse analysis to researching the relationship between history and collective memory. Analysing significant manifestations of the moral vocabulary of the Romanian transition from communism to democracy, the author demonstrates how discursive psychology can be used to understand some of the enduring and persistent dilemmas around the legacy of communism. This book argues that the understanding of language according to discursive psychology - as an action-oriented, world-building resource - can fill an important gap in the theorizing of public controversies over individual and collective meaning of the recent (communist) past. Tileagă maintains that discursive social psychology can serve as an intellectual and empirical bridge that can overcome several of the difficulties faced by researchers working in transitional justice studies and cognate fields. Examining eastern European communism in general and Romanian communism in particular, this reflective book will appeal to students and scholars of transitional justice, discursive psychology and memory. Cristian Tileagă is Senior Lecturer in Social Psychology at the School of Social Sciences at Loughborough University, UK. His research interests include discursive psychology, prejudice, political discourse and interdisciplinarity, and he has published widely on these topics.
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Preface -- Introduction: what does coming to terms with the past mean? -- 1. Transitional justice as situated practices -- 2. Collective and cultural memory: ethics, politics, and avoidance in remembering communism -- 3. Communism as moral problem -- 4. Communism as Other -- 5. Mea culpa -- 6. Remembering with and through archives -- 7. Transgression and the social construction of moral meanings -- 8. Using discursive psychology to explore contested and troubled pasts.

This book explores the contribution of discursive psychology and discourse analysis to researching the relationship between history and collective memory. Analysing significant manifestations of the moral vocabulary of the Romanian transition from communism to democracy, the author demonstrates how discursive psychology can be used to understand some of the enduring and persistent dilemmas around the legacy of communism. This book argues that the understanding of language according to discursive psychology - as an action-oriented, world-building resource - can fill an important gap in the theorizing of public controversies over individual and collective meaning of the recent (communist) past. Tileagă maintains that discursive social psychology can serve as an intellectual and empirical bridge that can overcome several of the difficulties faced by researchers working in transitional justice studies and cognate fields. Examining eastern European communism in general and Romanian communism in particular, this reflective book will appeal to students and scholars of transitional justice, discursive psychology and memory. Cristian Tileagă is Senior Lecturer in Social Psychology at the School of Social Sciences at Loughborough University, UK. His research interests include discursive psychology, prejudice, political discourse and interdisciplinarity, and he has published widely on these topics.

UABC ; Temporal ; 01/01/2021-12/31/2023.

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