The past in the present : the construction of Polish history /
Saved in:
Main Author: | |
---|---|
Other Authors: | |
Format: | Electronic eBook |
Language: | English Polish |
Published: |
Frankfurt am Main :
Peter Lang GmbH,
[2015]
|
Series: | Eastern European culture, politics and societies ;
v. 8. |
Subjects: | |
Online Access: | An electronic book accessible through the World Wide Web; click to view |
Tags: |
Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
|
Table of Contents:
- Part I. Polish dilemmas : practice and theory
- Two dimensions of history : an opening sketch
- History as a space for dialogue
- Poland's Kresy (Eastern Borderlands) : realms of memory in the process of cultural reproduction
- Constructing memory : a semantic analysis of Polish celebrations on the anniversary of Grunwald
- Stefan Czarnowski and the continued relevance of his theories in contemporary historical thought : a sketch portrait of a sociologist
- Part II. Poles and Germans : theory
- "The other side of memory" : historical experiences and their remembrance in Central-Eastern Europe
- Realms of memory (lieux de mémoire) in the context of German-Polish relations
- Quo vadis regional history?
- Cultural memory, communicative memory : theory and practice in the work of Jan Assmann
- Golo Mann : a turn toward narrative history and an "obsession with Germany"
- Part III. Poles and Germans : the empirical world
- On Germans "mine" and "not mine" : a personal case study
- In search of a "portable homeland" : Poles in multi-cultural Berlin
- Warmia/Ermland in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries : a sketch portrait of the village of Purda Wielka as a backdrop
- Collective memory and cultural landscape : reflections on a war cemetery restoration project in Drweck (Dröbnitz)
- "You glorify the foreign, but you do not know your own" : the magic of place and the mythologizing of landscape as factors in national education in the first half of the twentieth century : the case of East Prussia
- The "landscape after battle" : the political cult of the fallen in Poland after World War II
- "It was only a film!" : three images of conflicts and dialogues of memory.