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Remembrance in Transition: The Sajmište Concentration Camp in the Official Politics of Memory of Yugoslavia and Serbia

  • There is barely a hint that the buildings across from the most popular shopping mall in downtown Belgrade once housed the biggest fascist concentration camp in Serbia. Only the attentive observer will notice the derelict tower on the banks of the Sava river with rundown modernist pavilions clustered around it. How can it be that all attempts to create an appropriate place of memory at this site of the Holocaust and brutal repression against political prisoners have failed?

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Metadata
Document Type:Article
DOI:https://doi.org/10.25626/0045
Creator and project details
Author:Rena RädleGND
Editor:Joachim von PuttkamerGND, Michal KopečekGND, Włodzimierz BorodziejGND
Publishing Institution:Herder-Institut für historische Ostmitteleuropaforschung – Institut der Leibniz-Gemeinschaft
Title details
Title (English):Remembrance in Transition: The Sajmište Concentration Camp in the Official Politics of Memory of Yugoslavia and Serbia
Parent Title (English):Cultures of History Forum
Release Date:2020/01/03
Date of Publication (online):2018/11/09
Date of first Publication:2015/10/25
Language:English
Subject indexing
DDC-Classification:9 Geschichte und Geografie / 90 Geschichte / 900 Geschichte und Geografie
Collections:Cultures of History Forum (Imre Kertész Kolleg Jena)
Tag:Holocaust; Serbia; memorial site; memory; neglect
GND Keyword:Serbien; Judenvernichtung; Mißachtung; Kollektives Gedächtnis; Gedenkstätte
Manifestation description (file/s)
File Size:5195 KB
MIME-Type:application/pdf
Legal information
Licence / Usage Agreement (German):License LogoUrheberrechtlich geschützt
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