“Never forget” is one of the key injunctions uttered by which to remember the Holocaust. But the call to memory ran afoul of various debates among French philosophers and historians in the context of the post-World War II “memory wars.” France is a particularly problematic site for the urgency of remembering as French postwar memory was triply traumatized by its own status as a defeated power, its Vichyite collaboration with the Nazis, and the erasure of its role in the extermination of French and mostly of foreign refugee Jews. This essay examines the tactics of memory-struggle up to the summer of 2012, the 70th anniversary of the 1942 Vel d’Hiv roundup
This dissertation concerns the legacy of the Nazi forced enlistment during World War II and focuses ...
In 1987, the French historian Henry Rousso formulated an interpretive model that has decisively infl...
“…What is denied or repressed in a lapse of memory does not disappear; it returns in a transformed, ...
“Never forget” is one of the key injunctions uttered by which to remember the Holocaust. But the cal...
For many historians, including Pierre Nora, history and memory are contradictory modes of study. Mem...
On July 16, 1995, Jacques Chirac became the first president to publicly acknowledge the French Repub...
On July 16, 1995, Jacques Chirac became the first president to publicly acknowledge the French Repub...
On July 16th and 17th, 1942, during the height of France’s occupation by Nazi Germany, 12,844 Jews w...
Pierre Nora’s account of the ‘age of commemoration’ has been extremely influential in shaping the wa...
This microhistory examines commemoration of wartime conflict in the French department of the Haute-S...
Whereas the question of memory has become central to French identity, notably in regards to the Vich...
While many people know that World War II France was occupied by the Germans, retaining little sovere...
The Legacy of Historical Memory: The Holocaust, Identity, and the Question of Belonging in Franc
The Vel’ d’Hiv Roundup, where almost 13,000 men, women, and children were arrested, interned, and de...
A masterpiece ripped from oblivion: Rediscovered manuscripts and the memory of the holocaust in cont...
This dissertation concerns the legacy of the Nazi forced enlistment during World War II and focuses ...
In 1987, the French historian Henry Rousso formulated an interpretive model that has decisively infl...
“…What is denied or repressed in a lapse of memory does not disappear; it returns in a transformed, ...
“Never forget” is one of the key injunctions uttered by which to remember the Holocaust. But the cal...
For many historians, including Pierre Nora, history and memory are contradictory modes of study. Mem...
On July 16, 1995, Jacques Chirac became the first president to publicly acknowledge the French Repub...
On July 16, 1995, Jacques Chirac became the first president to publicly acknowledge the French Repub...
On July 16th and 17th, 1942, during the height of France’s occupation by Nazi Germany, 12,844 Jews w...
Pierre Nora’s account of the ‘age of commemoration’ has been extremely influential in shaping the wa...
This microhistory examines commemoration of wartime conflict in the French department of the Haute-S...
Whereas the question of memory has become central to French identity, notably in regards to the Vich...
While many people know that World War II France was occupied by the Germans, retaining little sovere...
The Legacy of Historical Memory: The Holocaust, Identity, and the Question of Belonging in Franc
The Vel’ d’Hiv Roundup, where almost 13,000 men, women, and children were arrested, interned, and de...
A masterpiece ripped from oblivion: Rediscovered manuscripts and the memory of the holocaust in cont...
This dissertation concerns the legacy of the Nazi forced enlistment during World War II and focuses ...
In 1987, the French historian Henry Rousso formulated an interpretive model that has decisively infl...
“…What is denied or repressed in a lapse of memory does not disappear; it returns in a transformed, ...