Having thought about these key issues of our research, we constructed a four-layered model that represents notions about the past and the future.
The past is “what really happened” , everything that has ever happened up until this point in time. The past is objective — however, we cannot get directly to the past — it is unreachable.
History is “what we think happened” . History is our tool to talk about the past. When we think about the past, we are creating history. History is subjective — as soon as we talk about the past, we can never be objective. It is also selective — history is only a tiny fraction of the past, of everything that ever happened. History is a narrative about the past influenced by morals, ideology, politics and ideas. History can be both concrete (“historical facts”) and abstract (theories, ideologies, etc.)
Political discourse is “what we talk should have happened” and “what we talk should happen” . It is even more subjective and selective. It is, amongst other things, the way we talk and express ideas about the past and future.
3.1. Regarding the past, political discourse on the one hand draws and builds on our idea of the past, what we call “our history”. One’s ideas of the past influence and inform one’s political discourse. On the other hand, political discourse also influences other people’s ideas of the past, their view of history.
3.2. Regarding the future, political discourse builds on history to construct and envision a specific idea of the future.
4. The future is “what we think, plan, hope and fear will happen” . It is everything that could ever happen from this point in time onwards. It is also subjective and selective. The future is a concept: a narrative we construct about the thihgs that will happen, influenced by our morals, ideologies, politics and ideas. Just like history allows us to construct countless different narratives about the past, talking about the future offers endless different versions that can be proposed.
Although we speak about the past and the future, we stay at present therefore our narrative is framed by the context — in our case, political.