Zero Hours
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"The Zero Hours project intends to produce three volumes: the first, this one, deals with the global confluences and new beginnings after the First World War. The second deals with the time following the Second World War and the third with the present period following the end of the Cold War."--Introduction. To cut off time and seal away the past, to proclaim a new beginning in the present and project a better future onto tomorrow and thus to make history is a key signature of modern social, political and cultural discourses. In this book, this practice is represented through the metaphor of the Zero Hour, which alludes to the wish to rebuild the past in the face of a crisis-ridden present characterised by growing conceptual insecurity, hoping for a more stable future. Indeed, the ever-new construction of our past, sequenced and ordered in explanatory narratives, bears witness to a future that ought to be. As the case studies in this volume show, this is a global phenomenon. Against the backdrop of a confluence of experiences which unsettled conceptual norms after the First World War, this volume presents a novel approach to global history as it examines ways of breaking with the past and the way in which societies, as well as transnational historical actors, employ key concepts to compose arguments for a better tomorrow--
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- Open Author
Hagen Schulz-Forberg
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