1st Edition
Memories of the Second World War in Neutral Europe, 1945–2023
This edited volume is a sequel to, and a development of, The Long Aftermath: Cultural Legacies of Europe at War, 1936–2016 (2016). It focuses on the six major European countries and states that remained officially neutral throughout the Second World War, namely Ireland, Portugal, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland, and the Vatican.
Its transnational, comparative, and interdisciplinary approach addresses complex questions pertaining to collective remembrance, national policies and politics, and intellectual as well as cultural responses to neutrality during and after the conflict. The contributions are from a broad range of scholars working across the disciplines of history, literature, film, media, and cultural studies. Their thought-provoking chapters challenge many assumptions about neutrality in the post-war European and global context, thereby filling a gap in the existing scholarship.
Common themes that run through the volume include the intertwined and dynamic links between neutrality and moral responsibility during and after the Second World War, the importance of memory politics and popular culture in shaping collective memories, and the impact of the Holocaust in shifting traditional perspectives on neutrality since the 1990s. This volume will be of interest to undergraduates, postgraduates, scholars interested in the field of memory studies, as well as non-specialist readers.
Foreword: The Search for Neutrality in Wartime
Jay Winter
Introduction: European Neutrals in World War II and after: A Balancing Act
Manuel Bragança and Peter Tame
Section I: Ireland / Éire.
1. ‘No useful purpose’? The Government Information Bureau (GIB) and Irish neutrality
Elspeth Payne and Conor Campbell
2. Forgotten Volunteers? Remembering and Recognising veterans of the Second World War in the Republic of Ireland
Bernard Kelly
3. The Emergency’s Improbable Frequency in Contemporary Irish Culture.
Anna Teekell
Section II: Portugal.
4. Portugal, World War II refugees and the Holocaust. History and Memory
Irene Flunser Pimentel
5. Portuguese Memorials of World War II, between Remembrance and Oblivion
Helena Pinto Janeiro
6. Memory works: The Changing Faces of Portugal’s Neutrality in recent Portuguese feature films and documentaries (1992-2017).
Pedro Aires Oliveira
Section III: Spain.
7. Diplomats in the fray. The struggle to establish the legacy of Spanish foreign policy during the Second World War
Emilio Sáenz-Francés and José Manuel Sáenz Rotko
8. From Sepharad to the Judeo-Masonic Conspiracy. Facts and Fictions on Spain and the Holocaust
Mario Martín Gijón
9. Neutrality of Spain in World War II: The Filmic Construction of a Myth.
Ana Luengo
Section IV: Sweden.
10. Archives on Victims of Nazism in Sweden: From Oral History to Cultural Memory or Oblivion
Johannes Heuman
11. Sweden, the War and the Holocaust in post-war memory
Pontus Rudberg
12. On remembrance and forgetting: the Second World War in Swedish memory culture.
Eva Kingsepp
Section V: Switzerland.
13. Switzerland and its neutral stance during World War II: a past that won't go away
Georg Kreis
14. Memorials of World War II and the Holocaust in Switzerland
Fabienne Meyer
15. Switzerland: The Policy of Neutrality and the Uses and Abuses of World War II Memory.
Regula Ludi
Section VI: The Vatican.
16. The papacy, the Catholic World, and the memory of the Second World War
Gabriele Rigano
17. Vatican diplomacy on the razor’s edge: preserving neutrality and ecclesiastical heritage sites in Italy during World War II
Michela Morgante
18. Telling children of neutral spaces in occupied Rome. Memories of the Church, the Pope, and persecution.
Mara Josi
Afterword: The Shadow of the Second World War on Neutral Europe.
Neville Wylie
Biography
Manuel Bragança is an Assistant Professor in the School of Languages, Cultures and Linguistics at University College Dublin. His publications include The Long Aftermath (2016, with Peter Tame), Ego-Histories of France and the Second World War (with Fransiska Louwagie, 2018), and Hitler’s French Literary Afterlives (2019).
Peter Tame is an independent researcher, specialising in twentieth-century French literature and ideology. His principal publications include The Ideological Hero (1998), Isotopias: Places and Spaces in French War Fiction of the Twentieth and Twenty-First Centuries (2015), Mnemosyne and Mars (2013), and The Long Aftermath (2016).