Other Stories: Experimental Forms of Contemporary Historying at the Crossroads Between Facts and Fictions
Published Online: Dec 14, 2018
Page range: 5 - 15
Received: May 09, 2018
Accepted: Oct 23, 2018
DOI: https://doi.org/10.2478/mik-2018-0001
Keywords
© 2018 Małgorzata Sugiera, published by Sciendo
This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 3.0 License.
The process of questioning the authority of academic history—in the form in which it emerged at the turn of the 19th century—began in the 1970s, when Hayden White pointed out the rhetorical dimension of historical discourse. His British colleague Alun Munslow went a step further and argued that the ontological statuses of the past and history are so different that historical discourse cannot by any means be treated as representation of the past. As we have no access to that which happened, both historians and artists can only present the past in accordance with their views and opinions, the available rhetorical conventions, and means of expression.
The article revisits two examples of experimental history which Munslow mentioned in his