Authoritarian and Post-authoritarian Practices of Building Collective Memory in Central and Eastern Europe
Authoritarian and Post-authoritarian Practices of Building Collective Memory in Central and Eastern Europe
Author(s): Dalia BáthorySubject(s): History, History of Communism
Published by: Zeta Books
Keywords: collective memory; Communism; museums; artists; participative art
Summary/Abstract: Among the most used expressions in scholarly articles concerning collective memory, is “dealing with the past”, or its more specific alternative, “dealing with the traumatic past”. This is a rather inexact formulation, because what scholars, artist, curators deal with is not the past in itself but the manner in which it is narrated and represented, or remembered, reconstructed. A series of questions are triggered by this statement: who “remembers”, for what purpose, with what consequences? The scope of this yearbook is to present two different ways of approaching the construction of collective remembrance: the authoritarian one and the post-authoritarian one. The articles discuss case studies of collective memory and identity building in Communist Romania, comparative studies of participative art in post-authoritarian regimes in Central and Eastern Europe, or intricate artistic approaches of traumatic collective memories.
Journal: History of Communism in Europe
- Issue Year: 2015
- Issue No: 6
- Page Range: 11-20
- Page Count: 10
- Language: English