The memory landscape in Germany has been lauded for its pluralism: for reckoning with the past not only critically but in its many complex facets. Nevertheless, particularly victims of repression in East Germany lament that their plight is not adequately represented and some have recently affiliated themselves with the Alternative for Germany (AfD) party and other groups on the far-right spectrum. This article seeks to explain the seeming contradiction between existing pluralism in German public memory and dissatisfaction with it by tracing how memory activists have shaped memory policy and institutions. Based on extensive interview and archival research, I argue that the infiltration of civil society into the institutions that govern memor...
The controversies surrounding the re-establishment of a national memorial in Berlin, the Neue Wache,...
Against the backdrop of the proliferation of trauma theory in public and academic debates, the paper...
Rees J, Papendick M, Zick A. Mapping Memory Culture in Germany: What, how, and why Germans remember....
The memory and the history of the WWII and the Third Reich still constrain politics and politicies i...
In the debate over transitional justice and human right issues, Germany‘s "Vergangenheitsbewält...
This study investigates the influence of history—more specifically the history of the Holocaust—and ...
This article examines the political uses of memory in the three successor states of the Third Reich....
The Geschichtsbewegung, or History Movement, was a new left social movement focused on researching l...
The anniversaries of the bombings of Dresden on 13 and 14 February 1945 have become key events in Ge...
Like most aspects of German politics and society after 1945, post-war German foreign policy has trad...
Rudy Koshar constructs a powerful framework in which to examine the subject of German collective mem...
At the turn of the millennium, a consensus seemed to exist which suggested that Germany had faced up...
Social movements rely on collective memories to assert claims, mobilize supporters and legitimize th...
Germany offers numerous examples of memorial museums, although beyond Berlin they are poorly represe...
Doing Memory and Contentious Participation: Remembering the Victims of Right-Wing Violence in German...
The controversies surrounding the re-establishment of a national memorial in Berlin, the Neue Wache,...
Against the backdrop of the proliferation of trauma theory in public and academic debates, the paper...
Rees J, Papendick M, Zick A. Mapping Memory Culture in Germany: What, how, and why Germans remember....
The memory and the history of the WWII and the Third Reich still constrain politics and politicies i...
In the debate over transitional justice and human right issues, Germany‘s "Vergangenheitsbewält...
This study investigates the influence of history—more specifically the history of the Holocaust—and ...
This article examines the political uses of memory in the three successor states of the Third Reich....
The Geschichtsbewegung, or History Movement, was a new left social movement focused on researching l...
The anniversaries of the bombings of Dresden on 13 and 14 February 1945 have become key events in Ge...
Like most aspects of German politics and society after 1945, post-war German foreign policy has trad...
Rudy Koshar constructs a powerful framework in which to examine the subject of German collective mem...
At the turn of the millennium, a consensus seemed to exist which suggested that Germany had faced up...
Social movements rely on collective memories to assert claims, mobilize supporters and legitimize th...
Germany offers numerous examples of memorial museums, although beyond Berlin they are poorly represe...
Doing Memory and Contentious Participation: Remembering the Victims of Right-Wing Violence in German...
The controversies surrounding the re-establishment of a national memorial in Berlin, the Neue Wache,...
Against the backdrop of the proliferation of trauma theory in public and academic debates, the paper...
Rees J, Papendick M, Zick A. Mapping Memory Culture in Germany: What, how, and why Germans remember....