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Post by jkeliar on Dec 2, 2017 3:54:34 GMT
I think that someone who personifies having a decentered self focuses not just on their perspective of the events that comprise of their life, but can take themselves out of the forefront and look at these same events from different perspectives. When Butt says that Berger and Luckmann propose “a decentred self that makes history, but not in circumstances of its own making” on p.126, I think that Butt is focusing on how history is almost always written through the perspective of the victors. I've attached a link that gives a good example as to how over both perspective and time, a lie can be turned into history. (Click here--> Pop Quiz to see the best example of this that I could find).
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