Nærvær og presentisme: om synet på fortiden i nyere historieteori
Permanent lenke
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/12191Dato
2017Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Forfatter
Bangstad, Torgeir RinkeSammendrag
Much recent theorizing in philosophy of history has revolved around the idea of enduring,
persistent pasts as opposed to the proto-modern sense of time which presupposes a neat
break between the absent past and the present. This article draws on examples from
memory studies, archaeology, art history, law and theory of history to explain the idea of
the persistence of the past, and to suggest that it constitutes a way to offset the distanced
relation to the past as an idea(l) in historic research. It also aims to investigate what precisely
is meant by «presentism» and «presence-paradigm», and to examine how these perspectives
differ with regard to how the past is understood. It is claimed that one important difference
can be found in the weight accorded to the agentive dimension of the past in the present.
Presence theorists argue that we can literally be moved by the past in ways we are not able
to predict or veto, while presentism implies an omnipresent present which fabricates the
pasts which are needed or desired. The relation to the past in the age of presentism is shaped
by a sense of crisis and a lack of confidence in the future which, it is argued, spawned our
current obsession with memory and heritage. Presence theorists, in contrast, argue that to
be moved by the past involves a more direct, experiential relation which is not necessarily
filtered through present needs or intentions.