LEADER 03998cam a2200469 i 4500001 259959 005 20240621231516.0 008 140227s2013 nyua b 001 0 eng d 010 2013478373 015 GBB387358 |2bnb 019 855581281855607020868961154872356745877015868 020 9781137343512 |q(hardback) 020 1137343516 |q(hardback) 020 9781349465743 |q(paperback) 020 1349465747 |q(paperback) 035 (OCoLC)ocn867104654 035 259959 042 lccopycat 049 LHMA 040 NLE |beng |erda |cDLC |dNLE |dBTCTA |dYDXCP |dUKMGB |dCUD |dOCLCO |dJCU |dCUS |dQGK |dCHVBK |dOCLCQ |dOCLCO |dCDX |dBDX |dZZAND |dA7U |dGBVCP |dOCLCO |dOCLCQ |dS3O |dOCLCO |dOCLCQ |dOCLCA |dPRC |dU3G |dIDU |dLHM 050 00 HM1033 |b.M454 2013 245 00 Memory and postwar memorials : |bconfronting the violence of the past / |cedited by Marc Silberman, Florence Vatan. 264 1 New York : |bPalgrave Macmillan, |c2013. 300 xviii, 252 pages : |billustrations (black and white) ; |c22 cm. 336 text |btxt |2rdacontent 336 still image |bsti |2rdacontent 337 unmediated |bn |2rdamedia 338 volume |bnc |2rdacarrier 490 1 Studies in European culture and history 504 Includes bibliographical references (pages 224-244) and index. 505 00 |gIntroduction: |tAfter the violence: memory / Florence Vatan and Marc Silberman |gPart I. |tCompeting memories -- |tNuremberg trials as Cold War competition: the politics of the historical record and the international stage / |rFrancine Hirsch -- |tCube on Red Square: a memorial for the victims of twentieth-century Russia / |rKarl Schlogel -- |tReactive memory: the Holocaust and the flight and expulsion of Germans / |rBill Niven -- |tBeyond Auschwitz? Europe's terrorscapes in the age of postmemory / |rRob van der Laarse -- |gPart II. |tStaging memory -- |tNarrative shock and Polish memory remaking in the twenty-first century / |rGenevieve Zubrzycki -- |tGrievability and the politics of visibility: the photography of Francesc Torres and the mass graves of the Spanish Civil War / |rOfelia Ferran -- |tDoing memory in public: postapartheid memorial space as an activist project / |rRobyn Autry -- |tMnemonic objects: forensic and rhetorical practices in memorial culture / |rLaurie Beth Clark -- |gPart III. |tRe-membering memory -- |tToward a critical reparative practice in post-1989 German literature: Christa Wolf's City of Angels or the overcoat of Dr. Freud (2010) / |rAnke Pinkert -- |tParadoxes of remembrance: dissecting France's "Duty to memory" / |rRichard J. Golsan -- |tAfter-words: lessons in memory and politics / |rMarc Silberman. 520 The twentieth century witnessed genocides, ethnic cleansing, forced population expulsions, shifting borders, and other disruptions on an unprecedented scale. This book examines the work of memory and the ethics of healing in post authoritarian societies that have experienced state-perpetrated violence. Focusing on global memorialization practices and local specificities, the contributors explore trans-generational encounters, performances, rituals, and diverse forms of remembrance and reconciliation in the aftermath of violent historical events: WWII, the Holocaust and the fall of the Berlin Wall, Stalinism in post-Soviet Russia and Eastern Europe, collaboration in Vichy France, the Civil War in Spain, and apartheid in South Africa. 591 Record updated by Marcive processing 21 June 2024 650 0 Atrocities |xSocial aspects |xHistory |y20th century. 650 0 War and society |xHistory |y20th century. 650 0 Crimes against humanity |xHistory |y20th century. 650 0 Collective memory. 700 1 Silberman, Marc, |d1948- |eeditor. 700 1 Vatan, Florence, |eeditor. 830 0 Studies in European culture and history. 856 42 |uhttp://www.palgraveconnect.com/doifinder/10.1057/9781137343529 |zConsulta en lĂ­nea 852 0 |bstacks |hHM1033 |i.M454 2013