Twenty years after communism : the politics of memory and commemoration / edited by Michael Bernhard and Jan Kubik.
Material type:![Text](/opac-tmpl/lib/famfamfam/BK.png)
Item type | Current library | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode | Item holds |
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Central Library, Sikkim University General Book Section | 943.0009049 BER/T (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | P43249 |
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Michael Bemhard and Jan Kubik
I. A Theory of the Politics of Memory 7
Jan Kubik and Michael Bemhard
PART ONE I FRACTURED MEMORY REGIMES
1. Revolutionary Road: 1956 and the Fracturing of Hungarian Historical Memory 37
Anna Seleny
3. Roundtable Discord: The Contested Legacy of 1989 in Poland 60
Michael Bemhard and Jan Kubik
4. Romania Twenty Years after 1989: The Bizarre Echoes of a
Contested Revolution 85
Grigore Pop-Eleches
$. I Ignored K»«r Revolution, but You Forgot Anniversary: Party Competition
in Slovakia and the Construction of Recollection 104
Carol Skalnik L^, Kevin Deegan-Krause, and Sharon L. Wolchik
6. Remembering the Revolution: Contested Pasts in the Baltic Countries 12.3
Daina S. Eglitis and Laura Ardava
7. Memories of the Past and Visions of the Future: Remembering the Soviet
Era and Its End in Ukraine 146
Oxana Shevel
PART TWO I PILLARIZED MEMORY REGIMES
8. Remembering, Not Commemorating, 1989: The Twenty-Year Anniversary of the
Velvet Revolution in the Czech Republic 171
Conor O'Dwyer
PART THREE| U NIFIED MEMORY REGIMES
9. Making Room for November 9,1989? The Fall of the Berlin Wall in German
Politics and Memory 195
David Art
10. The Inescapable Past: The Politics of Memory in Post-communist Bulgaria 113
Venelin I. Ganev
11. It Flappened Elsewhere: Remembering 1989 in the Former Yugoslavia 233
Aida A. Hozit
PART FOUR I CONCLUSIONS
12. The Politics and Culture of Memory Regimes: A Comparative Analysis 261
Michael Bemhard andJan Kubik
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