This article asserts that the current rise of right wing nationalism in Poland utilizes a set of nested historical erasures and silences. As Trouillot demonstrates, all history making is about selective acts of remembering and forgetting, and close attention to specific “unthinkable” histories reveals how power infuses the process of history making (1995:29). In the Polish case, the authorized historical record produces a homogeneous model of Polish identity by excluding specific histories of dispossession and destruction. Here, I focus on two places that relate to the horrors of Operation Vistula and the Holocaust. I begin by introducing these two silent spaces which trouble a small town on the eastern Polish border. The article moves firs...
The article is one of the results of the oral history project Memory and Oblivion. Sociocultural pos...
During the Second World War, the village of Pawłokoma, nowadays located a dozen kilometres from the ...
Memory scholars mostly agree that although social memory is culturally constructed, political and in...
This article asserts that the current rise of right wing nationalism in Poland utilizes a set of nes...
This article explores how silence is held and transmitted through the materiality of deserted and ab...
This article explores how silence is held and transmitted through the materiality of deserted and ab...
In this article I argue that remembrance of the Jews and the Holocaust in Poland was subject to a c...
This article proposes to look afresh at the legacies of communism in urban spaces in post-1989 Polan...
Researchers in social memory are bound in their work to include the relations occurring between the ...
This thesis details the maintenance of Polish identities through acts of memory: the (re)production...
Since 2017, Communist monuments in Poland have been disappearing from across the country. Behind the...
In 2011, a monument commemorating a group of Polish academics killed during the Nazi occupation was ...
The article examines contemporary memory politics in Belarus as exhibited by new monuments to Holoca...
The article examines contemporary memory politics in Belarus as exhibited by new monuments to Holoca...
This article examines the connection between mourning, memory, and national identity in Poland after...
The article is one of the results of the oral history project Memory and Oblivion. Sociocultural pos...
During the Second World War, the village of Pawłokoma, nowadays located a dozen kilometres from the ...
Memory scholars mostly agree that although social memory is culturally constructed, political and in...
This article asserts that the current rise of right wing nationalism in Poland utilizes a set of nes...
This article explores how silence is held and transmitted through the materiality of deserted and ab...
This article explores how silence is held and transmitted through the materiality of deserted and ab...
In this article I argue that remembrance of the Jews and the Holocaust in Poland was subject to a c...
This article proposes to look afresh at the legacies of communism in urban spaces in post-1989 Polan...
Researchers in social memory are bound in their work to include the relations occurring between the ...
This thesis details the maintenance of Polish identities through acts of memory: the (re)production...
Since 2017, Communist monuments in Poland have been disappearing from across the country. Behind the...
In 2011, a monument commemorating a group of Polish academics killed during the Nazi occupation was ...
The article examines contemporary memory politics in Belarus as exhibited by new monuments to Holoca...
The article examines contemporary memory politics in Belarus as exhibited by new monuments to Holoca...
This article examines the connection between mourning, memory, and national identity in Poland after...
The article is one of the results of the oral history project Memory and Oblivion. Sociocultural pos...
During the Second World War, the village of Pawłokoma, nowadays located a dozen kilometres from the ...
Memory scholars mostly agree that although social memory is culturally constructed, political and in...