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Ethnic Studies Review

Ethnic Studies Review

Authors

Paul Zanazanian

Orginal Publication Date

2010

Journal Title

Ethnic Studies Review

Volume

33

Issue

esr/vol33/iss2

First Page

123

Last Page

141

Abstract

Theorists tend to limit 'history's' role in the dynamics of ethnicity to that generally played by collective memory. By bringing the notion of historical consciousness to the fore, new possibilities may, however, emerge for discerning how history, as one cultural mode of remembering among many others, impacts both ethnicity delineations and fluctuations in boundary maintenance. In encapsulating the many forms of commemoration as well as the different dimensions of historical thinking, the contribution of historical consciousness accordingly lies on how group members historicize temporal change for moral orientation in time. By likewise signifying past events for negotiating their ethnicity and agency toward the 'significant Other', social actors gate-keep group boundaries. And, depending on their capacity and willingness to recognize the 'significant Other's' moral and historical agency in the flow of time, they can transform group delineations and render ethnic boundaries more porous. Key Words: Historical Consciousness; Ethnicity; Group Boundaries; Boundary Maintenance; Boundary Fluctuations; Collective Memory; Disciplinary History; Moral and Historical Agency.

Rights

​Copyright ©ESR, The National Association for Ethnic Studies, 2010

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