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Typ záznamu:
kapitola v odborné knize (C)
Domácí pracoviště:
Katedra historie (25800)
Název:
German-Minded Czechs? The Hlučín Region, the Second World War and Local Memory
Citace
Kladiwa, P. German-Minded Czechs? The Hlučín Region, the Second World War and Local Memory.
In:
Paul Srodecki, Daria Kozlova (eds.).
War and Remembrance. World War II and the Holocaust between Tabooization and Competing Narratives in Post-Socialist Europe.
1. vyd. Paderborn: Brill, Schöningh, 2025. s. 229-247. War (Hi)Stories, vol. 15. ISBN 978-3-506-79781-0.
Podnázev
Rok vydání:
2025
Obor:
Forma vydání:
Tištená verze
Kód ISBN:
978-3-506-79781-0
Název knihy v originálním jazyce:
War and Remembrance. World War II and the Holocaust between Tabooization and Competing Narratives in Post-Socialist Europe.
Název edice a číslo svazku:
War (Hi)Stories, vol. 15
Místo vydání:
Paderborn
Název nakladatele:
Brill, Schöningh
Označení vydání (číslo vydání):
1:
Vydáno:
v zahraničí
Autor zdrojového dokumentu:
Paul Srodecki, Daria Kozlova (eds.)
Počet stran:
19
Počet stran knihy:
304
Strana od:
229
Strana do:
247
Počet výtisků knihy:
EID:
Klíčová slova anglicky:
Hlučínsko Region, Ethnicity, World War Two, Local Memory, Local Differencies
Popis v původním jazyce:
The outbreak of Word War II in 1939 was a pivotal moment, particularly for East-Central and Eastern Europe. Its aftermath entrenched Europe in opposing ideological blocs, shaping Cold War divisions and fostering divergent war narratives. The collapse of the Eastern Bloc in 1989 and the Soviet Union in 1991 unleashed nationalist reappraisals of history. The narratives of former communist regimes were replaced by perspectives emphasizing national suffering and resistance, often sidelining uncomfortable truths, such as complicity in the Holocaust. Today, memory politics remain contentious, particularly in the context of Russia’s war against Ukraine, where competing WWII narratives reflect ongoing struggles over identity and historical interpretation. As a sequel to a previous publication, this second volume, comprising eleven chapters, builds upon and expands the first volume’s exploration of WWII and Holocaust-related mnemonic culture and memory politics in post-socialist Europe.
Popis v anglickém jazyce:
The outbreak of Word War II in 1939 was a pivotal moment, particularly for East-Central and Eastern Europe. Its aftermath entrenched Europe in opposing ideological blocs, shaping Cold War divisions and fostering divergent war narratives. The collapse of the Eastern Bloc in 1989 and the Soviet Union in 1991 unleashed nationalist reappraisals of history. The narratives of former communist regimes were replaced by perspectives emphasizing national suffering and resistance, often sidelining uncomfortable truths, such as complicity in the Holocaust. Today, memory politics remain contentious, particularly in the context of Russia’s war against Ukraine, where competing WWII narratives reflect ongoing struggles over identity and historical interpretation. As a sequel to a previous publication, this second volume, comprising eleven chapters, builds upon and expands the first volume’s exploration of WWII and Holocaust-related mnemonic culture and memory politics in post-socialist Europe.
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