Exile as context in history

Exile is a historic event, and a political social condition, recurring throughout history. In this article I argue that exile can be understood as a context in history, with particular implications for method and historic interpretation. This entails a specific way of constructing historic space, a...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Karolina Enquist Källgren
Format: Article
Language:Danish
Published: Lärdomshistoriska samfundet 2018-01-01
Series:Lychnos
Subjects:
Online Access:https://tidskriftenlychnos.se/article/view/20441
Description
Summary:Exile is a historic event, and a political social condition, recurring throughout history. In this article I argue that exile can be understood as a context in history, with particular implications for method and historic interpretation. This entails a specific way of constructing historic space, as well as time. Drawing on Koselleck’s concepts room of experience and horizon of expectations, I develop on the idea of a particular exile historic space. I further argue that, since exile is the movement of people from one place to another, exile as context is a methodological approach within the larger historical theory of circulation of knowledge, but with certain specific traits. One of these is the way in which exile maintains contact between locations, and thus also cultural and socio-political contexts. Another is the translation or transposition of concepts and ideas between languages. A third, is the turn towards a ‘universal’ or large-span history of canon. These traits are discussed as parts of the larger theoretical field of circulation of knowledge by relating them to Isabelle Stengers’ concept of propagation.
ISSN:0076-1648
2004-4852