Abstract

The 20th century showed the inconsistency of ideas about the predictability of historical processes, as a result of which the idea of the essence of humanitarian knowledge was subjected to rethinking. Consequently, some researchers come to the idea that the aim of historical science is to preserve historical memory. However, it is not the memory of past events; we are talking about a new type of memory. In this interpretation, memory has its own value as an object, and not just as a way of storing a large amount of knowledge about the past. The new methodology, which developed during the 20th century, allows us to look at many monuments of monumental art from a different point of view, as well as explain the fate of the Stavropol memorial, erected by O. Vutke in 1922–1923 and demolished in 1936.

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