In the wake of the deterioration of relations between modern Russia and Poland, the Katyn memorial has become a scene for the contestation of historical memory. In order to play down the 1940 executions of Polish military officers in Katyn, the Russian government has granted belated official recognition to 8,000 victims of Stalinism in the Smolensk region. After being brushed under the carpet in the Soviet Union and for nearly the first three decades in post-Soviet Russia, their suffering has now been instrumentalized in the memory war between Russia and Poland
In Central and Eastern European countries, memorial questions appeared right after the demise of the...
In 2011, a monument commemorating a group of Polish academics killed during the Nazi occupation was ...
There is a widespread perception that the countries of the former Soviet bloc removed all or most co...
Katyn– the Soviet massacre of over 21,000 Polish prisoners in 1940 – has come to be remembered as St...
This paper is devoted to memorial complexes with museum exhibits of the victims of political repress...
As many as 7465 Soviet soldiers died during fighting against the German troops in July 1944 in the V...
This article examines the connection between mourning, memory, and national identity in Poland after...
This thesis examines how memory can affect international relations and vice versa. In order to exami...
Polish-Russian relations seem to be heavily burdened by historical experience. History in- fluences...
This article presents an outline of the history of the Katyn massacre perpetrated by the Soviet Unio...
This essay illustrates the development of the politics of memory in post-Soviet Ukraine through an a...
From the beginning of the Soviet Union’s existence, the military doctrine of this empire consisted i...
The crime of Katyn in the Poles' national conscience, Aleksander Achmatowicz. The massacre of 15,000...
Polish-Russian relations seem to be heavily burdened by historical experience. History in- fluences ...
The Katyn Forest Massacre is one example of an event where the recorded history and collective memor...
In Central and Eastern European countries, memorial questions appeared right after the demise of the...
In 2011, a monument commemorating a group of Polish academics killed during the Nazi occupation was ...
There is a widespread perception that the countries of the former Soviet bloc removed all or most co...
Katyn– the Soviet massacre of over 21,000 Polish prisoners in 1940 – has come to be remembered as St...
This paper is devoted to memorial complexes with museum exhibits of the victims of political repress...
As many as 7465 Soviet soldiers died during fighting against the German troops in July 1944 in the V...
This article examines the connection between mourning, memory, and national identity in Poland after...
This thesis examines how memory can affect international relations and vice versa. In order to exami...
Polish-Russian relations seem to be heavily burdened by historical experience. History in- fluences...
This article presents an outline of the history of the Katyn massacre perpetrated by the Soviet Unio...
This essay illustrates the development of the politics of memory in post-Soviet Ukraine through an a...
From the beginning of the Soviet Union’s existence, the military doctrine of this empire consisted i...
The crime of Katyn in the Poles' national conscience, Aleksander Achmatowicz. The massacre of 15,000...
Polish-Russian relations seem to be heavily burdened by historical experience. History in- fluences ...
The Katyn Forest Massacre is one example of an event where the recorded history and collective memor...
In Central and Eastern European countries, memorial questions appeared right after the demise of the...
In 2011, a monument commemorating a group of Polish academics killed during the Nazi occupation was ...
There is a widespread perception that the countries of the former Soviet bloc removed all or most co...