Volume 128: Mnemonic Wars in Poland
Contents
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Table of contents
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Zofia Wóycicka, Joanna Wawrzyniak, Magdalena Saryusz-Wolska, Mnemonic Wars in Poland: An Introduction to New Research Directions
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Mateusz Mazzini, Theorising an Omnipresent Concept. Memory as a Thickening Factor of Populism
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Paweł Dobrosielski, Krzysztof Jaskułowski, Piotr Majewski, ‘Coat Thieves’ and Bandits? Belarusian Counter-Memory of the ‘Cursed Soldiers’
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Magdalena Nowicka-Franczak, The Polish Catholic Church and the Public Memory of the Shoah: Between Mnemonic Backlash and Settling Accounts with the Past
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Maria Kobielska, Kinga Siewior, Peripheral (Non)Polishnesses. Museums, Creeping Conflicts, and Transformative Frictions
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Sabina Giergiel, Katarzyna Taczyńska, Heritage Without Heirs: The German Legacy in Serbia. The Case of the Museum of Danube Swabians
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Tomasz Stryjek, Barbara Markowska-Marczak, Joanna Konieczna-Sałamatin, Third War of Independence? The Anti-Colonial Dynamics of Ukraine’s Politics of Memory after 2014 on the Example of the National Museum of the History of Ukraine in the Second World War in Kyiv
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Karolina Ćwiek-Rogalska, When the Mnemonic Actors Become Storytellers. The Lore of the ‘Recovery’ in 1970s Poland
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Justyna B. Walkowiak, Małgorzata Rutkiewicz-Hanczewska, Women in the Contemporary Polish Streetscape. Memory Wars
Varia
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Agnieszka Bartoszewicz, Crossing Barriers – Growing Barriers. Jews in Late Medieval Warsaw
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Anna Michałowska-Mycielska, Jewish Autobiographical Writing. Memoirs of Moses Vasertsug (c. 1760–1832)
Review Article
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Katarzyna Sierakowska, In Search of Female Agency: Latest Trends in Polish Research into Women’s History in Polish Lands in the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries
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Agnieszka Mrozik, An Unexpectedly Transgressive Subject of Twentieth-Century History”: How to Write (and Why to Read) about Communist Women Today
Reviews
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Space as a Category for the Research of History of Jews in Poland-Lithuania 1500–1900 – Hanna Węgrzynek;
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Moshe Rosman, Categorically Jewish, Distinctly Polish. Polish Jewish History Reflected and Refracted – Maria Cieśla;
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Linda Erker, Die Universität Wien im Austrofaschismus. Österreichische Hochschulpolitik 1933 bis 1938, ihre Vorbedingungen und langfristigen Nachwirkungen – Izabela Mrzygłód;
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Yechiel Weizman, Unsettled Heritage. Living next to Poland’s Material Jewish Traces after the Holocaust – Katarzyna Anzorge;
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Luso-Tropicalism and Its Discontents. The Making and Unmaking of Racial Exceptionalism, ed. by Warwick Anderson, Ricardo Roque, and Ricardo Ventura Santos – Szymon Głąb