You are invited to watch the online lecture by Tatjana Rozman, M.A. entitled How epidemics throughout history have marked collective memoryThe lecture will be held on on Thursday, January 28, at 5 p.m. on the profile FB of the Central Library of Celje or by clicking on Lecture.
The lecture will also be available to watch again after the premiere.
In the first lecture, Rozman, M.A., will talk about how epidemics throughout history have marked collective memory and how to deal with anxiety and discomfort.
The February lecture will be dedicated to Alma M. Karlin.
Lecture program History and Myths through Psychoanalysis:
- How epidemics throughout history have marked collective memory
- The Black Death in the 14th century and life after the epidemic ended
- How to deal with anxiety and discomfort
- Anxiety as a philosophical concept
- Why does history repeat itself?
- The function of repetition as a mental mechanism
- The unconscious and collective memory
- Why we don't learn important lessons from history
- What do myths tell us about history?
- The importance of literary knowledge and its message value in mythical content
- What do myths have in common with science?
- How myths live on today and why we need them
- Veronika Deseniška between myth and reality
- Veronika Deseniška in literature
- What lies behind the myth of Veronica of Desene?
- Why won't she sink into oblivion?
- Barbara of Celje between silence and distorted historical image
- The contradiction between her real and mythical image
- The Silence of Barbara of Celje in Collective and Historical Memory
- Comparing her position with Veronika Deseniška in collective memory
- Alma Karlin between silence and distortion
- Failed identity in family and environment
- How Celje marked her with its ideological struggles
- The reasons for her silence
- The general mythical framework of the image of women (Biblical Eve and the cult of the Virgin Mary)
- What do both myths tell us about attitudes towards women?
- Myth as phantasm and symptom
- What is the unconscious hiding from us?
- How psychoanalysis can help us understand history
- What do Socrates and Freud have in common?
- How to use the fundamental insights of theoretical psychoanalysis in historical research
- Myths, history and logic of dreams
The title painting is a work by Pieter Bruegel the Elder entitled The Triumph of Death (c. 1562)
source: https://kvarkadabra.net/2006/03/kuga/

