This thesis examines how and why Poland’s current ruling party, the Law and Justice (PiS), implements its memory politics in the following three memorial museums: the Warsaw Uprising Museum, the Ulma Family Museum of Poles Saving Jews in World War II, and the Museum of the Second World War in Gdańsk, based on theories of collective memory and populism. Core elements of PiS’s memory politics such as martyrdom romanticism, Christian loyalty, conservative values and patriotism, and PiS’s populist discourse emphasizing the moralistic dichotomy of the good we and bad others are reflected in these museums. There are two common narrative paradigms of these museums. First, Poles are innocent victims who suffered from Nazism and Soviet totali...
Abstract This paper explores the fate of Poland during, and immediately after, the Second World War ...
Abstract This paper explores the fate of Poland during, and immediately after, the Second World War ...
Abstract This paper explores the fate of Poland during, and immediately after, the Second World War ...
The Warsaw Ghetto Uprising in 1943 and the Warsaw Uprising in 1944 represent the bravery and courag...
This study examines the relationship between politics and the memory of the Second World War in Poli...
Since 2017, Communist monuments in Poland have been disappearing from across the country. Behind the...
This article addresses the performative dimension of the post-1989 Polish memorial culture of the Ho...
The process of Vergangenheitsbewaltigung, or mastering the past, is often slow and painful. All too...
This study investigates Poland’s politics of Holocaust memory from the contentious Jedwabne debate i...
This study investigates Poland’s politics of Holocaust memory from the contentious Jedwabne debate i...
The Polish and the Hungarian governing party, PiS and Fidesz, are mnemonic warriors who had already ...
On February 6th, 2018, Polish President Andrzej Duda signed “the amendment to The Act on the Institu...
On February 6th, 2018, Polish President Andrzej Duda signed “the amendment to The Act on the Institu...
The author analyzes the narrative of the Museum of the Second World War in Gdańsk using the category...
This thesis details the maintenance of Polish identities through acts of memory: the (re)production...
Abstract This paper explores the fate of Poland during, and immediately after, the Second World War ...
Abstract This paper explores the fate of Poland during, and immediately after, the Second World War ...
Abstract This paper explores the fate of Poland during, and immediately after, the Second World War ...
The Warsaw Ghetto Uprising in 1943 and the Warsaw Uprising in 1944 represent the bravery and courag...
This study examines the relationship between politics and the memory of the Second World War in Poli...
Since 2017, Communist monuments in Poland have been disappearing from across the country. Behind the...
This article addresses the performative dimension of the post-1989 Polish memorial culture of the Ho...
The process of Vergangenheitsbewaltigung, or mastering the past, is often slow and painful. All too...
This study investigates Poland’s politics of Holocaust memory from the contentious Jedwabne debate i...
This study investigates Poland’s politics of Holocaust memory from the contentious Jedwabne debate i...
The Polish and the Hungarian governing party, PiS and Fidesz, are mnemonic warriors who had already ...
On February 6th, 2018, Polish President Andrzej Duda signed “the amendment to The Act on the Institu...
On February 6th, 2018, Polish President Andrzej Duda signed “the amendment to The Act on the Institu...
The author analyzes the narrative of the Museum of the Second World War in Gdańsk using the category...
This thesis details the maintenance of Polish identities through acts of memory: the (re)production...
Abstract This paper explores the fate of Poland during, and immediately after, the Second World War ...
Abstract This paper explores the fate of Poland during, and immediately after, the Second World War ...
Abstract This paper explores the fate of Poland during, and immediately after, the Second World War ...