DOS LIMITES DA HISTORIOGRAFIA MODERNA À ABERTURA DE NOVOS HORIZONTES: TEMPO HISTÓRICO, LINGUAGEM E ÉTICA A PARTIR DE BERBER BEVERNAGE E HANS ULRICH GUMBRECHT
Abstract
This article analyses how Berber Bevernage and Hans Ulrich Gumbrecht articulates their propositions in the field of theory of history in order to favor the emergence of historiographic experiences committed to disrupting the normative templates that structure the modern understanding of history. Confronting the perspective that the historical distance allows the emergence of an objective historical discourse and the ethical implications concerning the modern concept of History, the authors present alternative ways to engage the past that considers the hauntological experience or the presence. Therefore, the article treats how the particularities of their reactions to modern historiography are responses to the necessity of reconfigurations of contemporary historiography in regard to its ethical commitment in the experience and presentation of histories.