Inaugural Lecture by Professor Giacomo Lichtner

Join Professor Giacomo Lichtner for his inaugural lecture, where he explores how imagination shapes the way we understand, represent and reimagine history.

Lectures, talks and seminars; Inaugural lectures

Registration is essential

Hunter Council Chamber, Level 2, Hunter Building, Gate 2, Kelburn Parade


Description

Still image from Amen, person looking through the hole in the door

Encounters with the historical imagination

In this inaugural professorial lecture, historian Giacomo Lichtner considers the contested roles that imagination plays in history: from filling evidential gaps to constructing national narratives of the past, and from dreaming new questions to harnessing the evocative powers of artistic invention. Imagination simultaneously tethers us to the past and frees us from it, allowing us to subvert it, adapt it, and sometimes find relevance in it.

Starting from Holocaust Studies, where the role of imagination is especially controversial, and then moving through the politics of memory and representation, this lecture reflects on Professor Lichtner’s encounters with the historical imagination, and challenges us to consider our role in (re-)imagining the past.

Register for the event