Abstract
The purpose of the article is to analyze the use of images of scientific and technological innovations in historical policy. The novelty of such a statement of the question is to distinguish the collective memory of scientific communities and the use of individual memorial images in the context of the formation of the state historical agenda. The author identifies three main models of historical politics: antagonistic, cosmopolitan, agonistic. Within the framework of the antagonistic model, the emphasis is on the competition of various scientific communities for the priority of the most significant discoveries and inventions. The cosmopolitan model focuses on incorporating the achievements of individual communities into the overall process of increasing scientific knowledge on a global scale. The agonistic model allows you to build parallel memorial narratives, but leaves open the question of working out traumatic moments in the history of the development of scientific communities.
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