After All These Years, Still Divided by Memories? East Central Europe and European Union Politics of Memory Twenty Years after the Enlargement
After All These Years, Still Divided by Memories? East Central Europe and European Union Politics of Memory Twenty Years after the Enlargement
Author(s): Barbara Törnquist-PlewaSubject(s): WW II and following years (1940 - 1949), History of Communism, History of European Union, EU-Approach / EU-Accession / EU-Development, Politics of History/Memory
Published by: SAGE Publications Ltd
Keywords: politics of memory; European Union; central and eastern Europe; memory divisions;
Summary/Abstract: The article analyzes how central and eastern European members of the U relate to the main nodes of the U’s politics of memory, such as the first and second world wars, the Holocaust as Europe’s negative founding myth, Soviet Communism being equally as criminal as the Nazi regime, expulsions as a pan-European trauma, the legacy of colonialism, Europe as a continent of immigration, and Europe’s post-1945 success story. The author argues that mnemonic divides between the West and East in Europe remain visible despite the U’s efforts to bridge this gap over the twenty years since the 2004 enlargement.
Journal: East European Politics and Societies
- Issue Year: 38/2024
- Issue No: 04
- Page Range: 1080-1092
- Page Count: 13
- Language: English
- Content File-PDF