An introduction to key issues in the study of war and memory that examines significant conflicts in twentieth-century Europe.
David A. Messenger argues that in order to understand the history of twentieth-century Europe, we must first appreciate and accept how different societies and cultures remember their national conflicts. We must also be aware of the ways that those memories evolve over time. In War and Public Memory: Case Studies in Twentieth-Century Europe, Messenger outlines the relevant history of war and its impact on different European nations, and assesses how and where the memory of these conflicts emerges in political and public discourse and in the public sphere and public spaces of Europe.
The case studies presented in this volume emphasize the major wars fought on European soil as well as the violence perpetrated against civilian populations. Each chapter begins with a brief overview of the conflict and then proceeds with a study of how memory of that struggle has entered into public consciousness in different national societies. The focus throughout is on collective social, cultural, and public memory, and in particular how memory has emerged in public spaces throughout Europe, such as parks, museums, and memorial sites.
Messenger discusses memories of the First World War for both the victors and the vanquished as well as their successor states. Other events discussed include the Bolshevik Revolution and subsequent conflicts in the former Soviet Union, the Armenian genocide, the collapse of Yugoslavia , the legacy of the civil war in Spain, Germany’s reckoning with its Nazi past, and the memory of occupation and the Holocaust in France and Poland.
This volume serves as both an invaluable introduction to the study of public memory and an appeal to scholars, students, and citizens for the enduring significance of memory studies in understanding the history of twentieth-century Europe.
Author(s): David A. Messenger
Series: War, Memory, and Culture
Publisher: University of Alabama Press
Year: 2020
Language: English
Pages: 256
City: Tuscaloosa
Contents
List of Figures
Acknowledgments
Introduction
One. Studying the Cultural Memory of War: Theory and Practice
Two. Local, National, and International Memory of the First World War and the Armenian Genocide
Three. The Bolshevik Revolution, Communism, and Successor States after the First World War: Memory and Identity in Interwar Eastern Europe
Four. Victors' Memory, Forgetting, and Recovery: Civil War Memory in Spain
Five. Germany, Nazism, Collaboration, and the Holocaust: The History of the Second World War in Europe
Six. Dealing with Nazism in Germany
Seven. War Memory in France and Poland
Eight. Finding the Holocaust and Jewish History in Contemporary Europe
Nine. The Memory of Communism and Conflict in Eastern Europe
Ten. War, Violence, and Memory Return: The Collapse of Yugoslavia and the War in Bosnia
Conclusion
Notes
Selected Bibliography
Index