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Full Description
In historical studies, 'collective memory' is most often viewed as the product of nationalizing strategies carried out by political élites in the hope to create homogeneous nation-states. In contrast, this book asserts that collective memories develop out of a never-ending, triangular negotiation between local, national and transnational actors.
Contents
1. Introduction. Local, National, Transnational Memories: A Triangular Relationship; Marnix Beyen PART I: POLITICS OF URBAN MEMORY 2. Physical Space, Urban Space, Civic Space: Rotterdam's Inhabitants and their Appropriation of the City's Past; Willem Frijhoff 3. Politics of Street Names: Local, National, Transnational Budapest; Emilia Palonen 4. Transfer Zones: German and Global Suffering in Dresden; Mathias Berek 5. Manufacturing Local Identification behind the Iron Curtain in Sevastopol, Ukraine after World War II; Karl D. Qualls 6. Local memories in a Contested Borderland. Commemorations in Strasbourg between France, Germany and Europe; Thomas Williams PART II: PLACES AND PRACTICES OF SUBALTERN MEMORY 7. Displacements and Hidden histories: Museums, Locality and the British Memory of the Transatlantic Slave Trade;; Geoffrey Cubitt 8. Structures of Collective Memory: The last Bannerman in Local Japan; Michael Wert 9. Remembering Padre Cícero: Local, Regional and National Memory in Northeastern Brazil; Gerald Greenfield 10. 'Reconciliation across the graves'? The German war cemetery Ysselsteyn as a place of remembrance between local and (inter)national areas of conflict 1945-2000; Christine Gundermann 11. Local and counter-memories in Post-Socialist Romania; Duncan Light and Craig Young 12. Greetings from Borgerocco. An Antwerp Neighborhood as a National Icon of Globalization and Anti-Globalism; Marnix Beyen 13. Memories on the Move. The Italian Student Movement of 1977 between Local, National and Global Memories of Protest; Andrea Hajek