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Reflections on History from Below

Autores

  • University of Pittsburgh

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.17533/udea.trahs.n20a16

Resumo

History from below is insurgent history, deriving much of its popularity and power from movements from below. The phrase had its modern origin in the 1930s, when Lucien Febvre, Georges Lefebvre, and A.L. Morton used it to discuss the history of working people in France and England. The term exploded into wider international usage in the 1960s and 1970s as various movements arose to demand new histories. In the US and many other parts of the world the civil rights and Black power movements demanded a consideration of the past that took seriously the issues of race and slavery. Anti-war and anti-colonial movements, especially those protesting the Vietnam War, called for rethinking the histories of empire and resistance. The women’s rights movement made perhaps the greatest challenge to conventional histories, insisting that the larger part of humanity be included. All of these movements asked, who is a proper subject of history? Who is in and who is out? History from below, as a politicized type of social history, arose to answer these questions.

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Biografia do Autor

, University of Pittsburgh

Distinguished Professor of Atlantic History at the University of Pittsburgh. His “histories from below” have won numerous awards, including the George Washington Book Prize, and have been translated into seventeen languages worldwide. He is co-author, with Peter Linebaugh, of La Hidra de la Revolución: Marineros, esclavos y campesinos en la historia oculta del Atlántico (2005; new edition forthcoming from Traficantes de Sueños) and author of Barco de Esclavos: La trata a través del Atlántico (Madrid: Capitán Swing, 2021). He produced a prize-winning documentary film, Ghosts of Amistad, (2013) directed by Tony Buba. He is currently working as guest curator in the JMW Turner Gallery at Tate Britain and writing a book about escaping slavery by sea in antebellum America.

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Publicado

2022-07-31

Versões

Como Citar

Marcus. (2022). Reflections on History from Below. Trashumante. Revista Americana De Historia Social, (20), 296–299. https://doi.org/10.17533/udea.trahs.n20a16

Edição

Seção

La historia social desde el presente