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Southeast European Integration Perspectives - 3: Conflict and Memory: Bridging Past and Future in (South East) Europe

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Conflict and Memory presents a collection of essays focusing reconstructed past in Europe. The book approaches the Balkans as integral part of the common European history. In fact, many countries that are already European Union members also have conflicting memories and are to this very day involved in a complex process of, first, coming to terms with their own past; second, acknowledging each other"s conflicting memories; and, third, trying to (re)construct a common European memory as part of transnational memory spaces. The essays highlight the different memory discourses. Against the background of country-specific and comparative studies, they offer convincing analyses and arguments as to why the process of dealing with the past has to be seen both against the background of European history and in the context of the European Union integration process.

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Southeast European Integration Perspectives - 3: Conflict and Memory: Bridging Past and Future in (South East) Europe, Wolfgang Petritsch, Vedran Džihić, Christophe Solioz, Franz-Lothar Altmann

Sprache
Erscheinungsdatum
2010
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Titel
Southeast European Integration Perspectives - 3: Conflict and Memory: Bridging Past and Future in (South East) Europe
Sprache
Englisch
Verlag
Nomos
Erscheinungsdatum
2010
Einband
Paperback
Seitenzahl
326
ISBN10
3832948791
ISBN13
9783832948795
Reihe
Beschreibung
Conflict and Memory presents a collection of essays focusing reconstructed past in Europe. The book approaches the Balkans as integral part of the common European history. In fact, many countries that are already European Union members also have conflicting memories and are to this very day involved in a complex process of, first, coming to terms with their own past; second, acknowledging each other"s conflicting memories; and, third, trying to (re)construct a common European memory as part of transnational memory spaces. The essays highlight the different memory discourses. Against the background of country-specific and comparative studies, they offer convincing analyses and arguments as to why the process of dealing with the past has to be seen both against the background of European history and in the context of the European Union integration process.