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      From Militant Voices to Militant Irony: Examining Identity, Memory and Conflict in the Basque Country

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      Europe's Journal of Psychology
      PsychOpen
      identity, memory, conflicts, narratives, irony

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          Abstract

          Collective memory and identity so often go hand in hand with conflicts. Alongside the use of violence, conflicts unfold against the backdrop of different narratives about the past through which groups constantly remind themselves of the supposed origin of the conflict, and consequently, what position individuals are expected to take as members of the group. Narratives – as symbolic tools for interpreting the past and the present, as well as happenings that have yet to occur – simultaneously underpin, and are underpinned by, the position held by each warring faction. Drawing on previous works, this paper compares different versions of the 2016 truce period in the Basque Country stemming from three subjects identified, to varying degrees, with the main political actors involved in that conflict. These three cases have been selected from a total of 16 participants who were asked to define the Basque conflict and to provide an account of the 2006 truce period by using 23 documents taken from different Spanish newspapers. On the one hand, the results show two narratives reproducing the versions of two of the main political actors involved in the conflict, and on the other hand, a narrative characterized by a more personal and ironic appropriation of those versions. Results are discussed vis-à-vis the use of irony in history teaching in increasingly plural societies.

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          How the past weighs on the present: social representations of history and their role in identity politics.

          Socially shared representations of history have been important in creating, maintaining and changing a people's identity. Their management and negotiation are central to interethnic and international relations. We present a narrative framework to represent how collectively significant events become (selectively) incorporated in social representations that enable positioning of ethnic, national and supranational identities. This perspective creates diachronic (temporal) links between the functional (e.g. realistic conflict theory), social identity, and cognitive perspectives on intergroup relations. The charters embedded in these representations condition nations with similar interests to adopt different political stances in dealing with current events, and can influence the perceived stability and legitimacy of social orders. They are also instrumental in determining social identity strategies for reacting to negative social comparisons, and can influence the relationships between national and ethnic identities.
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            Cosmopolitan Virtue, Globalization and Patriotism

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              The end into the beginning: Prolepsis and the reconstruction of the collective past

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                EJOP
                Eur J Psychol
                Europe's Journal of Psychology
                Eur. J. Psychol.
                PsychOpen
                1841-0413
                31 August 2017
                : 13
                : 3
                : 548-558
                Affiliations
                [a ]Department of Communication and Psychology, Aalborg University , Aalborg, Denmark
                [2]Webster University Geneva, Geneva, Switzerland
                [3]University of Neuchâtel, Neuchâtel, Switzerland
                Author notes
                [* ]Niels Bohr Centre for Cultural Psychology, Department of Communication and Psychology, Kroghstræde 3, 9220 Aalborg, Denmark. ignacio@ 123456hum.aau.dk
                Article
                ejop.v13i3.1324
                10.5964/ejop.v13i3.1324
                5590536
                e181dd85-d771-4222-be69-696170863eb6
                Copyright @ 2017

                This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) 3.0 License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.

                History
                : 27 October 2016
                : 08 December 2016
                Categories
                Theoretical Contributions

                Psychology
                narratives,irony,conflicts,memory,identity
                Psychology
                narratives, irony, conflicts, memory, identity

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