Format:
1 online resource (516 pages)
Edition:
1st ed.
ISBN:
9789633860939
Content:
Intro -- Title page -- Copyright page -- Table of Contents -- Introduction -- Part One POLITICS OF MEMORY AND CONSTRUCTING DEMOCRACY -- European Mass Killing and European Commemoration -- Why World War II Memories Remain So Troubled in Europe and East Asi -- Post-Authoritarian Memories in Europe and Latin America -- Divided Memory Revisited: The Nazi Past in West Germany and in Postwar Palestine -- On the Relationship Between Politics of Memory and the State's Attitude toward the Communist Past -- Part Two HISTORIES AND THEIR PUBLICS -- Democracy, Memory, and Moral Justice -- Promotion of a Usable Past: Official Efforts to Rewrite Russo-Soviet History, 2000-2014 -- Germany's Two Processes of "Coming to Terms with the Past" -Failures, After All? -- Part Three SEARCHING FOR CLOSURE IN DEMOCRATIZING SOCIETIES -- Twenty-Five Years "After" -- The Ambivalence of Settling Accounts with Communism: The Polish Case -- The Romanian Revolution in Court: What Narratives About 1989? -- Slobodan Milošević in the Hague: Failed Success of a Historical Trial -- The South African Transition: Then and Now -- Scholarship and Public Memory: The Presidential Commissionfor the Analysis of the Communist Dictatorship in Romania(PCACDR) -- Moldova under the Soviet Communist Regime: History and Memory -- Part Four COMPETING NARRATIVES OF TROUBLED PASTS -- Coming to Terms with Catholic-Jewish Relations in the Polish Catholic Church -- After Communism: Identity and Morality in the Baltic Countries -- The Romanian Communist Past and the Entrapment of Polemics -- Past Intransient/Transiting Past: Remembering the Victims and the Representation of Communist Past in Bulgaria -- List of Contributors -- Index.
Note:
Description based on publisher supplied metadata and other sources
Additional Edition:
ISBN 9789633860922
Additional Edition:
Erscheint auch als Druck-Ausgabe ISBN 9789633860922
Language:
English