In the history of modernity, childhood represents societies’ hopes and desires for the future. An offspring of modernity, the socialist project had a unique preoccupation with children and childhood for the social (re)making of societies. However, research on both sides of the Iron Curtain has explored children’s lives in socialist societies by focusing on the organised efforts of state socialisation, largely overlooking how childhoods were actually experienced. In this article, first, we delve into the utility of memory stories for exploring childhoods and children’s everyday lives in a variety of socialist spaces. Second, we explicate how memory stories about everyday life can serve as data for cultural-political analysis. We aim to show ...
The paper offers an analytical exploration and points of connection between the categories of activi...
Studies focusing on East Central Europe have generously explored collective memory (lieux de mémoire...
The paper addresses a gap in the literature on childhood and/in post-socialism and uses everydayness...
This study compares German memory of life in the German Democratic Republic with Russian memory of l...
This article engages continuing discussions in childhood studies on (re)inserting the study of child...
Emerging from a collective biography research, we study childhood memories of adult narrators who pe...
There was not one, singular childhood in socialist Czechoslovakia, but many and diverse, plural, chi...
The focus of attention of this special issue has both personal and professional significance for the...
During the Cold War, linear and future-oriented temporalities were enforced to accelerate social tra...
More than 20 years after the fall of the Iron Curtain, scholars and educators continue to engage wit...
This study compares German memory of life in the German Democratic Republic with Russian memory of l...
The chapter is an auto-duo-ethnographic exercise carried out by two scholars of life-writing, who gr...
This article traces different appropriations of intergenerational memory in post-communist Romania i...
This is a small qualitative study drawing on memories of childhood. It examines social change in chi...
This article discusses the research approach in 'Pathways through Childhood', a small qualitative st...
The paper offers an analytical exploration and points of connection between the categories of activi...
Studies focusing on East Central Europe have generously explored collective memory (lieux de mémoire...
The paper addresses a gap in the literature on childhood and/in post-socialism and uses everydayness...
This study compares German memory of life in the German Democratic Republic with Russian memory of l...
This article engages continuing discussions in childhood studies on (re)inserting the study of child...
Emerging from a collective biography research, we study childhood memories of adult narrators who pe...
There was not one, singular childhood in socialist Czechoslovakia, but many and diverse, plural, chi...
The focus of attention of this special issue has both personal and professional significance for the...
During the Cold War, linear and future-oriented temporalities were enforced to accelerate social tra...
More than 20 years after the fall of the Iron Curtain, scholars and educators continue to engage wit...
This study compares German memory of life in the German Democratic Republic with Russian memory of l...
The chapter is an auto-duo-ethnographic exercise carried out by two scholars of life-writing, who gr...
This article traces different appropriations of intergenerational memory in post-communist Romania i...
This is a small qualitative study drawing on memories of childhood. It examines social change in chi...
This article discusses the research approach in 'Pathways through Childhood', a small qualitative st...
The paper offers an analytical exploration and points of connection between the categories of activi...
Studies focusing on East Central Europe have generously explored collective memory (lieux de mémoire...
The paper addresses a gap in the literature on childhood and/in post-socialism and uses everydayness...