04274nam 2200853 450 991048558520332120170816154321.03-653-99490-X3-653-03232-6(CKB)3710000000090198(EBL)1632203(SSID)ssj0001111943(PQKBManifestationID)11593199(PQKBTitleCode)TC0001111943(PQKBWorkID)11157376(PQKB)11223262(MiAaPQ)EBC1632203(oapen)https://directory.doabooks.org/handle/20.500.12854/70827(PPN)22912819X(EXLCZ)99371000000009019820140313h20142014 uy 0engur|n|---|||||txtccrEvoking Polish memory state, self and the Communist past in transition /Anna Witeska-MlynarczykBernPeter Lang International Academic Publishing Group2014Frankfurt am main, [Germany] :Peter Lang Edition,2014.©20141 online resource (255 p.)Warsaw Studies in Contemporary History,2195-1187 ;Volume 3Description based upon print version of record.3-631-64163-X Includes bibliographical references.Cover; Acknowledgements; Preface; Contents; Notes on Transcription; Introduction; Chapter One. Hidden Dialogicality: personal memory, expert knowledge, historical policy, and pedagogy of patriotism; Chapter Two. The Mediating Role of the State in a Social Practice of Acquiring a Hero/Victim Subject Position; Chapter Three. Religious Framework for Embodied Mutual Orientation: a hero/victim experience situated in the Catholic Church; Chapter Four.The Archbishop is not the Church! Talk in the Association as a collaborative moral actionChapter Five. The Space of Ambiguity: between the collectively enacted frames and the experience of the self in timeChapter Six. Between Acknowledgement and Erasure: socialdynamics behind the production of political identities materialized in the public space; Chapter Seven. The Factory of Pathologies: collectivized imageries about the former security officers under the democratic state; Chapter Eight. Excavating Memories of Political Violence in a 'Lawful' State: a case-study of a security officer's trial; Chapter Nine. Resolving Disorientation through Narrative:two case-studies; ConclusionBibliographyThe book offers an interdisciplinary but very grounded look at the question of memory politics in contemporary Poland. It describes the conflicting ways in which two groups of people - the former anti-communist activists and the former officers of the repressive regime - have actively engaged in representations and claims about the communist past in the contemporary reality of one Polish town. The material is based on ethnographic fieldwork conducted during the years 2006-2008. The author focuses on the processes of reconstruction of memories and subjectivities taking place at the intersectionHistoriographyPolitical aspectsPolandMemoryPolitical aspectsPolandPost-communismPolandCollective memoryPolandGroup identityPolandEthnologyPolandCommunistErinnerungEvokingGeschichtlichkeitKommunismusMemorymemory landscapeMlynarczykPolishpolitische GewaltPolitische IdentitätStateTransitionWiteskaHistoriographyPolitical aspectsMemoryPolitical aspectsPost-communismCollective memoryGroup identityEthnology943.805072Witeska-Mlynarczyk Anna1973-861875MiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQBOOK9910485585203321Evoking Polish memory1923502UNINA