The words of the Moscow Declaration of 1943 allowed Austria to claim itself as a victim of Hitler, rather than a contributor to the Nazis in WWII. In the years following the war, this distinction would define the attitude of Austrians towards their role in war, despite the stark statistics of Austrian support for the Nazi cause. The victim status allowed society to develop taboos and an alternative collective memory of history. This memory was embodied in monuments and museums dedicated to the war. Additionally, a sort of social amnesia for the years between 1938 and 1945 was constructed. More or less, this silence continued until the election of Kurt Waldheim as the President of Austria in 1986. The former UN Secretary General’s campaign ...
This article seeks to link Austrian policy and attitudes towards Displaced Persons and refugees with...
What were the most exceptional developments in Austrian identity and how did the Waldheim-Affair in ...
Compared to the late 1970s, when the Austrian voting behavior was characterized by extraordinary sta...
This article analyses the discursive construction of collective and individual memories and the func...
Between 1945 and 1956, the Second Austrian Republic failed to address the large number of former Aus...
Between 1945 and 1956, the Second Austrian Republic failed to address the large number of former Aus...
This essay explores the politics of memory in post-1945 Austrian political culture, focusing on the ...
This article considers two types of right extremism in Austria’s history: Nazism and the preceding ‘...
This observation, registered by Marianne Enigl and Herbert Lackner, points to an incontestable and c...
The annexation of Austria by Nazi Germany from 1938 to 1945, or “Anschluss”, was the darkest chapter...
Cold War scholarship has frequently treated Austria as a Germany sub-problem in the critical early...
This chapter presents a brief theoretical outline and contextualization in Austria's postwar history...
Głównym przedmiotem rozważań niniejszej pracy magisterskiej jest proces rozliczania się Austriaków z...
The following essay will show that dealing with the Hungarian refugees unmasks the popular stereotyp...
The following essay will show that dealing with the Hungarian refugees unmasks the popular stereotyp...
This article seeks to link Austrian policy and attitudes towards Displaced Persons and refugees with...
What were the most exceptional developments in Austrian identity and how did the Waldheim-Affair in ...
Compared to the late 1970s, when the Austrian voting behavior was characterized by extraordinary sta...
This article analyses the discursive construction of collective and individual memories and the func...
Between 1945 and 1956, the Second Austrian Republic failed to address the large number of former Aus...
Between 1945 and 1956, the Second Austrian Republic failed to address the large number of former Aus...
This essay explores the politics of memory in post-1945 Austrian political culture, focusing on the ...
This article considers two types of right extremism in Austria’s history: Nazism and the preceding ‘...
This observation, registered by Marianne Enigl and Herbert Lackner, points to an incontestable and c...
The annexation of Austria by Nazi Germany from 1938 to 1945, or “Anschluss”, was the darkest chapter...
Cold War scholarship has frequently treated Austria as a Germany sub-problem in the critical early...
This chapter presents a brief theoretical outline and contextualization in Austria's postwar history...
Głównym przedmiotem rozważań niniejszej pracy magisterskiej jest proces rozliczania się Austriaków z...
The following essay will show that dealing with the Hungarian refugees unmasks the popular stereotyp...
The following essay will show that dealing with the Hungarian refugees unmasks the popular stereotyp...
This article seeks to link Austrian policy and attitudes towards Displaced Persons and refugees with...
What were the most exceptional developments in Austrian identity and how did the Waldheim-Affair in ...
Compared to the late 1970s, when the Austrian voting behavior was characterized by extraordinary sta...