Listing 1 - 1 of 1 |
Sort by
|
Choose an application
Analyzing the earliest debates over the memory of Nazi camps, the author makes an important contribution to the study of their origin, reducing the existing asymmetry in our knowledge on the relevant phenomena in Western and Eastern Europe. This is all the more important as the Poles and Polish Jews, whose involvement in the disputes over memory she describes, were the most important group of survivors and eyewitnesses of the camps and so the genuine group of memory. Prof. Dariusz Stola (Institute of Political Studies of the Polish Academy of Science) The vast number and variety of sources us
Collective memory --- World War, 1939-1945 --- Prisoners and prisons, German. --- Concentration camps --- Collective remembrance --- Common memory --- Cultural memory --- Emblematic memory --- Historical memory --- National memory --- Public memory --- Social memory --- Memory --- Social psychology --- Group identity --- National characteristics --- 1944–1950 --- Arrested --- Auschwitz --- Birkenau --- Camps --- Denkmal --- Disputes --- Gedenkveranstaltungen --- Gross-Rosen, --- Holocaust --- Konzentrationslager --- Majdanek --- Mourning --- Nazi --- Poland --- Polish --- Stalinismus --- Stutthof --- Treblinka --- Vernichtungslager --- Woycicka
Listing 1 - 1 of 1 |
Sort by
|