Growing in the Shadow of Antifascism : Remembering the Holocaust in State-Socialist Eastern Europe / edited by Kata Bohus, Peter Hallama, Stephan Stach

Другие авторы: Bohus, Kata [HerausgeberIn] | Hallama, Peter [HerausgeberIn] | Stach, Stephan [HerausgeberIn]Тип материала: ТекстТекстЯзык: English (английский язык) Издатель: Budapest ; Vienna ; New York Central European University Press 2022Описание: 1 Online-Ressource (340 Seiten)Вид содержания: Text Средство доступа: Computermedien Тип носителя: Online RessourceISBN: 9789633864364Тематика(и): 1945-1991 | Judenvernichtung | Kollektives Gedächtnis | Geschichtspolitik | Antifaschismus | Kunst | Medien | Deutschland | Ostmitteleuropa | Osteuropa | LitauenЖанр/форма: Open AccessЭлектронное местонахождение и доступ: frei zugänglich Сводка: IntroductionHistoriographyKatarzyna Person, Agnieszka Zolkiewska: Edition of documents from the Ringelblum Archive (the Underground Archive of the Warsaw Ghetto) in Stalinist PolandPeter Hallama: "A great civic and scientific duty of our historiography." Czech historians and the Holocaust in the 1970s and 1980sBenjamin Lapp: The Conflicted Identities of Helmut Eschwege: Communist, Jew and Historian of the Holocaust in the German Democratic RepublicSites of MemoryKata Bohus: Parallel memories? Public memorialization of the antifascist struggle and martyr memorial services in the Hungarian Jewish community during early CommunismGintare Malinauskaite: Holocaust Narrative(s) in SovietLithuania: The Case of the Ninth Fort Museum in KaunasYechiel Weizman: Memory Incarnate: Jewish Sites in CommunistPoland and the Perception of the ShoahArtistic RepresentationsAnja Tippner: Toward a Soviet Holocaust Novel: Traumatic Memory and Socialist Realist Aesthetics in Anatolii Rybakov's Heavy SandDaniel Veri: Commissioned Memory. Official Representations of the Holocaust in Hungarian Art (1955-1965)Richard S. Esbenshade: Towards a Shared Memory? The Hungarian Holocaust in Mass-Market Socialist Literature, 1956-1970Media and Public DebateAlexander Walther: Distrusting the Parks: Heinz Knobloch's Journalism and the Memory of the Shoah in the GDRMiriam Schulz: 'We pledge, as if it was the highest sanctum, to preserve the memory.' Sovetish Heymland, facets of Holocaust commemoration in the Soviet Union and the Cold WarStephan Stach: "The Jewish diaries [...] undergo one edition after the other." Early Polish Holocaust Documentation, East German Anti-Fascism and the Emergence of Holocaust Memory in SocialismConclusion
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IntroductionHistoriographyKatarzyna Person, Agnieszka Zolkiewska: Edition of documents from the Ringelblum Archive (the Underground Archive of the Warsaw Ghetto) in Stalinist PolandPeter Hallama: "A great civic and scientific duty of our historiography." Czech historians and the Holocaust in the 1970s and 1980sBenjamin Lapp: The Conflicted Identities of Helmut Eschwege: Communist, Jew and Historian of the Holocaust in the German Democratic RepublicSites of MemoryKata Bohus: Parallel memories? Public memorialization of the antifascist struggle and martyr memorial services in the Hungarian Jewish community during early CommunismGintare Malinauskaite: Holocaust Narrative(s) in SovietLithuania: The Case of the Ninth Fort Museum in KaunasYechiel Weizman: Memory Incarnate: Jewish Sites in CommunistPoland and the Perception of the ShoahArtistic RepresentationsAnja Tippner: Toward a Soviet Holocaust Novel: Traumatic Memory and Socialist Realist Aesthetics in Anatolii Rybakov's Heavy SandDaniel Veri: Commissioned Memory. Official Representations of the Holocaust in Hungarian Art (1955-1965)Richard S. Esbenshade: Towards a Shared Memory? The Hungarian Holocaust in Mass-Market Socialist Literature, 1956-1970Media and Public DebateAlexander Walther: Distrusting the Parks: Heinz Knobloch's Journalism and the Memory of the Shoah in the GDRMiriam Schulz: 'We pledge, as if it was the highest sanctum, to preserve the memory.' Sovetish Heymland, facets of Holocaust commemoration in the Soviet Union and the Cold WarStephan Stach: "The Jewish diaries [...] undergo one edition after the other." Early Polish Holocaust Documentation, East German Anti-Fascism and the Emergence of Holocaust Memory in SocialismConclusion

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