The Annaberg as a German—Polish Lieu de Mémoire
Identifieur interne : 000819 ( Main/Corpus ); précédent : 000818; suivant : 000820The Annaberg as a German—Polish Lieu de Mémoire
Auteurs : James Bjork ; Robert GerwarthSource :
- German History [ 1477-089X ] ; 2007.
Abstract
This essay analyses a fiercely contested transnational lieu de mémoire in twentieth-century Polish—German history: the Annaberg. Historiography has thus far largely neglected the role played by this ‘holy mountain’ of Upper Silesia, a symbol that has stood at the heart of a number of competing identity-forging narratives. The competition over the Annaberg as a site for multiple collective memories occurred on three distinct but often overlapping levels: first between nation-states, secondly between ideological camps, and thirdly between national- and local-level actors. Drawing on a substantial body of primary sources, this article contributes both to the scholarly investigation of a political myth that cast a long shadow over German—Polish relations and to the growing academic interest in transnational ‘realms of memory’.
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DOI: 10.1177/0266355407079909
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<front><div type="abstract">This essay analyses a fiercely contested transnational lieu de mémoire in twentieth-century Polish—German history: the Annaberg. Historiography has thus far largely neglected the role played by this ‘holy mountain’ of Upper Silesia, a symbol that has stood at the heart of a number of competing identity-forging narratives. The competition over the Annaberg as a site for multiple collective memories occurred on three distinct but often overlapping levels: first between nation-states, secondly between ideological camps, and thirdly between national- and local-level actors. Drawing on a substantial body of primary sources, this article contributes both to the scholarly investigation of a political myth that cast a long shadow over German—Polish relations and to the growing academic interest in transnational ‘realms of memory’.</div>
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