This article explores how silence is held and transmitted through the materiality of deserted and abandoned places along the Polish frontier; and the generative role that silencing plays in local practices of tolerance. The article discusses two specific sites of silence in a town on Poland’s eastern border. Both sites were abandoned or destroyed at the same time, and are part of a larger landscape of religious and ethnic conflict in the area. This history of conflict is managed through small everyday acts of forgetting, minimising and silencing. Yet, the two sites at the centre of this article demonstrate that silencing is an incomplete process. The fragmented materiality of the two places undercuts local silences, actively invoking experi...
Based on ethnographic research conducted in a town on the Polish-Belarussian border, this book exami...
Abandoned sites of trauma in Poland appear to be forgotten, but their removal from social and cultur...
Silence appears frequently in discourses of the Holocaust – as a metaphorical absence, a warning aga...
This article explores how silence is held and transmitted through the materiality of deserted and ab...
This article asserts that the current rise of right wing nationalism in Poland utilizes a set of nes...
This article asserts that the current rise of right wing nationalism in Poland utilizes a set of nes...
In this article, we suggest that silence is often more about remembering than forgetting. We conside...
In this article I argue that remembrance of the Jews and the Holocaust in Poland was subject to a c...
Republishing of the article printed in East European Politics and Societies and Cultures, 2016, Volu...
Writing about the annihilation of the unprecedented concentration of Jews in Poland, spurred by the ...
The fall of the Third Reich, turning the “most tragic page” in the history of the Jewish nation, i ....
In her article A place with no memory. How disruption of intergenerational transmission influences t...
This article presents an example of how the transnational production of memory is at work in a small...
The article is inspired by Marcin Kącki’s reportage, Białystok. Biała siła czarna pamięć, which reco...
Researchers in social memory are bound in their work to include the relations occurring between the ...
Based on ethnographic research conducted in a town on the Polish-Belarussian border, this book exami...
Abandoned sites of trauma in Poland appear to be forgotten, but their removal from social and cultur...
Silence appears frequently in discourses of the Holocaust – as a metaphorical absence, a warning aga...
This article explores how silence is held and transmitted through the materiality of deserted and ab...
This article asserts that the current rise of right wing nationalism in Poland utilizes a set of nes...
This article asserts that the current rise of right wing nationalism in Poland utilizes a set of nes...
In this article, we suggest that silence is often more about remembering than forgetting. We conside...
In this article I argue that remembrance of the Jews and the Holocaust in Poland was subject to a c...
Republishing of the article printed in East European Politics and Societies and Cultures, 2016, Volu...
Writing about the annihilation of the unprecedented concentration of Jews in Poland, spurred by the ...
The fall of the Third Reich, turning the “most tragic page” in the history of the Jewish nation, i ....
In her article A place with no memory. How disruption of intergenerational transmission influences t...
This article presents an example of how the transnational production of memory is at work in a small...
The article is inspired by Marcin Kącki’s reportage, Białystok. Biała siła czarna pamięć, which reco...
Researchers in social memory are bound in their work to include the relations occurring between the ...
Based on ethnographic research conducted in a town on the Polish-Belarussian border, this book exami...
Abandoned sites of trauma in Poland appear to be forgotten, but their removal from social and cultur...
Silence appears frequently in discourses of the Holocaust – as a metaphorical absence, a warning aga...