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Sarah Irving-Stonebraker on the devastating effects of our Ahistoric Age: "Embedded in larger stories"

Does a well-developed ‘sense of history’ help provide people with a sense of purpose and wellbeing?

On this week’s Afternoon Light Georgina Downer speaks with Sarah Irving-Stonebraker to unpack the causes and effects of the modern world’s historical amnesia. Revealing how our ‘ahistoric age’ cuts individuals off from their roots, robs them of their place in a broader story, and may even be an unrecognised cause of many of our current anxieties.

Sarah Irving-Stonebraker is Associate Professor of History and Western Civilisation at Australian Catholic University in North Sydney, which is part of the Ramsay Centre’s Western Civilisation Program. She previously served as co-editor of the Journal of Religious History (2021-2024). She is the author of Natural Science and the Origins of the British Empire and Priests of History: Stewarding the Past in an Ahistoric Age.

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