7 - Ideology, Race, and Culture
from Part Two - Thresholds and Limits of History
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 June 2012
Summary
La coeur a ses raisons que la raison ne connâit pas.
Blaise Pascal
For the history of civilization the perennial dream of sublime life has the value of a very important reality.…There is not a more dangerous tendency in history than that of representing the past as if it were a rational whole and dictated by clearly defined interests.
Johan Huizinga
Historians shifted in the last generation their view of the role of ideas in the French Revolution from the social interpretation to the politicalcultural one. According to the social interpretation, ideas were a reflection of a social structure determined beforehand; the rise of the bourgeoisie happened independently of revolutionary ideas. According to the political-culture interpretation, revolutionary ideas, culture, and experience were constitutive to the historic meaning of the Revolution as the first attempt in modern democracy. This political culture – made up of expressed and hidden meanings within revolutionary texts, symbols, holidays, images, and collective mentalities such as the obsession with conspiracy – was about a political imaginary world where no one had ever been and to which the Revolution wanted to lead, as much as it was about concrete interests, struggles for power, and ideological control.
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- Foundational PastsThe Holocaust as Historical Understanding, pp. 118 - 144Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2011