Series Introduction, Peter Lee.
- Acknowledgements.
- Chapter 1. History Education and the Construction of a National Identity, Mario Carretero, Maria Rodriguez-Moneo, and Mikel Asensio.
- Section I. Theoretical Issues.
- Chapter 2. De-Nationalize History and What Have We Done? Ontology, Essentialism, and the Search for a Cosmopolitan Alternative, Jonathan M. Hansen.
- Chapter 3. De-Nationalizing History Teaching and Nationalizing It Differently! Some Reflections On How to Defuse the Negative Potential of National(ist) History Teaching, Stefan Berger.
- Chapter 4. Re-Thinking History Textbooks in a Globalised World, Stuart Foster.
- Chapter 5. Commentary: What History to Teach? Whose History? Alberto Rosa.
- Section II. Purposes of History Education.
- Chapter 6. Dilemmas of Common and Plural History: Reflections on History Education and Heritage in a Globalizing World, Maria Grever.
- Chapter 7. School History as a Resource for Constructing Identities: Implications of Research from the United States, Northern Ireland, and New Zealand, Keith C. Barton.
- Chapter 8. A Traditional Frame for Global History: The Narrative of Modernity in French Secondary School, Nicole Tutiaux-Guillon.
- Chapter 9. Indigenous Historical Consciousness: An Oxymoron or a Dialogue? Peter Seixas.
- Chapter 10. Commentary: Identity Construction and the Goals of History Education, Cesar Lopez and Mario Carretero.
- Section III. Students' Ideas and Identities.
- Chapter 11. Students' Historical Narratives and Concepts About the Nation, Mario Carretero, Cesar Lopez, Maria Fernanda Gonzalez, and Maria Rodriguez-Moneo.
- Chapter 12. Ways of Knowing and the History Classroom: Supporting Disciplinary Discussion and Reasoning About Texts, Avishag Reisman and Sam Wineburg.
- Chapter 13. The Intersection of Historical Understanding and Ethical Reflection During Early Adolescence: A Place Where Time is Squared, Michelle J. Bellino and Robert L. Selman.
- Chapter 14. The Discursive Negotiation of Narratives and Identities in Learning History, Angela Bermúdez.
- Chapter 15. Commentary: Student Identities in the Present and Their Historical Understanding of the Past: Complications and Implications for Future Research, Alan Stoskopf.
- Section IV. Museums and Identities.
- Chapter 16. Historical Narratives in the Colonial, National and Ethnic Museums of Argentina, Paraguay and Spain, Marisa González de Oleaga.
- Chapter 17. From Identity Museums to Mentality Museums: Theoretical Basis for History Museums, Mikel Asensio.
- Chapter 18. Commentary: What is the Purpose of a History Museum in the Early 21st Century? Veronica Boix Mansilla.
- Section V. Collective Memories and Representations of Past and Future.
- Chapter 19. Are Family Recollections an Obstacle to History Education? How German Students Make Sense of the East German Dictatorship, Sabine Moller.
- Chapter 20. History as a Dynamic Process: Reanalysing a Case of Anglo-Japanese Reconciliation, Kyoko Murakami.
- Chapter 21. The Future Shapes the Present: Scenarios, Metaphors and Civic Action, Helen Haste and Amy Hogan.
- Chapter 22. Monuments in Our Minds: Historical Symbols as Cultural Tools, Jaan Valsiner.
- Chapter 23. Commentary: The Complex Construction of Identity Representations and the Future of History Education, Floor van Alphen and Mikel Asensio.