940 Geschichte Europas
Refine
Year of publication
Document Type
- Article (15)
- Book (14)
- Part of a Book (8)
- Conference Proceeding (8)
- Other (5)
Is part of the Bibliography
- no (50)
Keywords
- Ostmitteleuropa (13)
- Polen (5)
- Deutschland (4)
- Migration (4)
- Juden (3)
- Mythos (3)
- Polen <Volk> (3)
- Adam Mickiewicz (2)
- Armenier (2)
- Baltikum (2)
Steinort ist ein europäischer Erinnerungsort par excellence, denn hier kreuzen, verflechten und überschreiben sich verschiedenste Geschichten und Erinnerungen. Das Interviewprojekt von Ulla Lachauer und Agata Kern geht diesen vielfältigen subjektiven Erinnerungssträngen nach und legt unterschiedliche Erinnerungskulturen frei.
Religiöse Migrationen
(2021)
Religious migrations
(2021)
Visions of Stability and Anxiety: The Mediatic Building of Nations and Border Regions, 1918–1930
(2021)
Adam Mickiewicz, der polnische Romantiker, Poet, Übersetzer und Journalist, war die meiste Zeit seines Lebens Migrant. Außerdem reiste er zum Vergnügen, zu wissenschaftlichen Zwecken und auf politischer Mission u.a. nach Berlin, Rom, Konstantinopel. Eine Beschreibung der Ortswechsel zeigt eine mobile und transnationale Lebensgeschichte.
Adam Mickiewicz, the Polish romantic, poet, translator and journalist, was a migrant for most of his life. He also travelled to Berlin, Rome, Constantinople and other places for pleasure, scientific purposes and on political missions. These frequent changes of location show a mobile and transnational life story.
In the three essays of the newly established JECES “forum” in issue 2/2018, three col-leagues posit contemporary East Central Europe as “interwar period 2.0” and emphasize the significance of references to interwar history in contemporary memory politics. Their contributions point out the importance of these historical references for nation and state building after 1989/90 and for contemporary national identities. Building on this diagnosis, we would like to propose a methodological framework that looks at state-building in East Central Europe from a different perspective: by taking as an object of study the broad range of different—and often negative—views on the performance and capabilities of the states of East Central Europe from the nineteenth century until today. We argue that if we want to understand the various conflicts that affected—and continue to affect—the devel¬opment of states in this region, we need to understand how views on states shape activities towards states. If we achieve this, we can challenge deeply entrenched narratives—both popular and historiographical—that center around the idea of the inevitable collapse of states in East Central Europe, be they the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth, the Habsburg and Romanov Empires, the interwar states or the states of the Warsaw Pact.