This dissertation focuses on the analysis from different points of view of the event that took place in Saint Petersburg on 9 January 1905, the so called “Bloody Sunday”, through the analysis of contemporary and subsequent memories, as well as works written by well-known historians (such as the Italian Ettore Cinnella and the American William Henry Chamberlin): the aim of the dissertation is to comprehend how this specific event is perceived by society through the passing of time. Special attention is given to the topic of “recurrent historical events”, as in events that though happening many years after the “Bloody Sunday”, carry remarkable similarities to it: the case studies at issue are the events that happened in Tbilisi in 1989 and in Vilnius in 1991.
Attraverso un’attenta e precisa analisi di memorie contemporanee e posteriori, supportate da studi di rinomati storici (quali, ad esempio, Ettore Cinnella e William Henry Chamberlin), la presente tesi di laurea si propone di comprendere come un evento storico complesso e drammatico quale la “domenica di sangue”, avvenuta a San Pietroburgo il 9 gennaio 1905, sia percepito col passare del tempo dalla società. Un’attenzione particolare è infine rivolta al concetto di “recurrent historical events”, ovvero degli eventi posteriori alla “domenica di sangue” che posseggono caratteristiche riconducibili alla stessa: i due casi studiati nel presente elaborato sono gli eventi di Tbilisi e Vilnius, avvenuti rispettivamente nel 1989 e nel 1991.
Memorie contemporanee, percezione e recurrent historical events: diversi aspetti della "domenica di sangue"
ROSSETTO, ALICE
2022/2023
Abstract
This dissertation focuses on the analysis from different points of view of the event that took place in Saint Petersburg on 9 January 1905, the so called “Bloody Sunday”, through the analysis of contemporary and subsequent memories, as well as works written by well-known historians (such as the Italian Ettore Cinnella and the American William Henry Chamberlin): the aim of the dissertation is to comprehend how this specific event is perceived by society through the passing of time. Special attention is given to the topic of “recurrent historical events”, as in events that though happening many years after the “Bloody Sunday”, carry remarkable similarities to it: the case studies at issue are the events that happened in Tbilisi in 1989 and in Vilnius in 1991.File | Dimensione | Formato | |
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https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12608/49379