This book explores the demise of the grand narrative of European
modernity. That once commanding narrative located the meaning of the
past in the present and the meaning of the present in an ever-receding
future. Today, instead, the present defines both the past and the
future. The 'contemporary' has replaced 'modern' and 'post-modern'
self-understandings. The times of the past and the future have been
transformed into versions of 'now' while the present has acquired its
own history. History of the Present describes the emergence of this
'contemporary' historical consciousness across a wide spectrum of
cultural phenomena ranging from historiography to heritage and museum
studies, and from the globalization of the novel to the rise of science
fiction. The culture of the 'contemporary' appears particularly clearly
in the merging of high and low culture along with art and fashion. This
book will appeal to scholars of sociology, cultural and social theory,
museum and heritage studies, and literary history and criticism.