Ulteriori informazioni
This edited collection explores memories and experiences of genocide, civilian casualties, and other atrocities that occurred after the Second World War.
Sommario
Introduction: Authenticity and Victimhood after the Second World War
Randall Hansen, Achim Saupe, Andreas Wirsching, and Daqing Yang
Part One: Methodological and Theoretical Approaches
1. From Hero’s Death to Suffering Victim? Reflections on the "Post-Heroic" Culture of Memory
Andreas Wirsching
2. Victim Identities in the Public Sphere: Patterns of Shaping, Ranking, and Reassessment
Michael Schwartz
Part Two: Victims of Genocide and Massacres
3. Eastern European Shoah Victims and the Problem of Group Identity
Ingo Loose
4. History on Trial before the Social Welfare Courts: Holocaust Survivors, German Judges, and the Struggle for "Ghetto Pensions"
Jürgen Zarusky
5. Construction of Victimhood in Contemporary China: Toward a Post-Heroic Representation of History?
Daqing Yang
6. "The Death of Manila" in World War II and Its Postwar Commemoration
Satoshi Nakano
Part Three: War Victims
7. Air Raid Victims in Japan’s Collective Remembrance of War
James Orr
8. Between Memory and Policy: How Societies of Leningrad Siege Survivors Remember the War
Tatiana Voronina
9. Victims or Perpetrators or Both? How History Textbooks and History Teachers in Post-Soviet Lithuania Remember Postwar Partisans
Barbara Christophe
Part Four: Victims of Forced Migration and Deportations
10. In Search of a Usable Memory: Politics of History and the Commemoration Day for German Forced Migrants after World War II
Mathias Beer
11. Of Italian Perpetrators and Victims: Forced Migration in the Italian-Yugoslavian Border Region (1922-54)
Tobias Hof
12. Defiant Victims: The Deportation of the Chechens and the Memory of Stalinism in the Soviet Union and Russia
Moritz Florin
13. East Asian Victimhood Goes to Paris: A Consideration of WWII-Related Chinese, Japanese, and Korean Nominations to UNESCO’s Memory of the World Project
Lori Watt
Info autore
Randall Hansen is a professor in the Department of Political Science at the University of Toronto and director of the Centre for European, Russian, and Eurasian Studies at the Munk School.
Achim Saupe is the director of the Leibniz Research Alliance for Historical Authenticity at the Centre for Contemporary History (ZZF).
Andreas Wirsching is the director of the Institute for Contemporary History (IfZ).
Daqing Yang is an associate professor of history and international affairs at George Washington University.
Riassunto
This edited collection explores memories and experiences of genocide, civilian casualties, and other atrocities that occurred after the Second World War.