1st Edition

The Holocaust/Genocide Template in Eastern Europe

Edited By Ljiljana Radonić Copyright 2020
    160 Pages
    by Routledge

    160 Pages
    by Routledge



    The Holocaust/Genocide Template in Eastern Europe discusses the “memory wars” in the course of the post-Communist re-narration of history since 1989 and the current authoritarian backlash.



    The book focuses specifically on how “mnemonic warriors” employ the “Holocaust template” and the concept of genocide in tendentious ways to justify radical policies and externalize the culpability for their international isolation and worsening social and economic circumstances domestically. The chapters analyze three dimensions: 1) the competing narratives of the “universalization of the Holocaust” as the negative icon of our era, on the one hand, and the “double genocide” paradigm, on the other, which focuses on “our own” national suffering under – allegedly “equally” evil – Nazism and Communism; 2) the juxtaposition of post-Communist Eastern Europe and Russia, reflected primarily in the struggle of the Baltic states and Ukraine to challenge Russian propaganda, a struggle that runs the risk of employing similarly distorting and propagandistic tropes; and 3) the post-Yugoslav rhetoric portraying one’s own group as “the new Jews” and one’s opponents in the wars of the 1990s as (akin to) “Nazis”. Surveying major battle sites in this “memory war”: memorial museums, monuments, film and the war over definitions and terminology in relevant public discourse, The Holocaust/Genocide Template in Eastern Europe will be of great interest to scholars of genocide, the Holocaust, historical memory and revisionism, and Eastern European Politics.



    This book was originally published as a special issue of the Journal of Genocide Research.

    Introduction: The Holocaust/Genocide Template in Eastern Europe

    Ljiljana Radonic

    1. Limits of Universalization: The European Memory Sites of Genocide

    Éva Kovács

    2. From “Double Genocide” to “the New Jews”: Holocaust, Genocide and Mass Violence in Post-Communist Memorial Museums

    Ljiljana Radonic

    3. A Baltic Struggle for a “European Memory”: The Militant Mnemopolitics of The Soviet Story

    Maria Mälksoo

    4. Genocide, Holodomor and Holocaust Discourse as Echo of Historical Injury and as Rhetorical Radicalization in the Russian-Ukrainian Conflict of 2013–18

    Nicolas Dreyer

    5. Talking Past Each Other: Language and Post-World War II Killings in Slovenia

    Gregor Kranjc

    6. Defending the “Good Name” of the Polish Nation: Politics of History as a Battlefield in Poland, 2015–18

    Jörg Hackmann

    7. Liberty Square, Budapest: How Hungary Won the Second World War

    István Rév

    Biography



    Ljiljana Radonić heads an ERC project on “Globalized Memorial Museums. Exhibiting Atrocities in the Era of Claims for Moral Universals” at the Austrian Academy of Sciences (Institute of Culture Studies and Theatre History). Her habilitation dealt with the “World War II in Post-Communist Memorial Museums”. She teaches at the Department of Political Science at the University of Vienna, Austria.