1st Edition

Quest for a Suitable Past Myth and Memory in Central and Eastern Europe

162 Pages
by Central European University Press

The past may be approached from a variety of directions. A myth provides a sense of direction: it reunites people around certain values and projects and pushes them in one direction or another. The present volume brings together a range of case studies of myth making and myth breaking in east Europe from the nineteenth century to the present day. In particular, it focuses on the complex process... Read more
Foreword, Introduction, An Obscure Object of Desire: The Myth of Alba Iulia and its Social Functions, 1918-1940, Croatia between the Myths of the Nation-State and of the Common European Past, Deconstructing the Myth of the Wicked German in Northern and Western Parts of Poland: Local Approaches to Cultural Heritage, Mythologizing the Biographies of Romanian Underground Communists: The Case Study of Miron Constantinescu, Women in the Communist Party: Debunking a (Post-)Communist Mythology, Avatars of the Social Imaginary: Myths about Romanian Communism after 1989, Post-Communist Politics of Memory and the New Regime of Historiography: Recent Controversies on the Memory of the Forty-Five Years of the Communist Yoke and the Myth of Batak, The Phenomenon of Parahistory in Post-Communist Bulgaria: Old Theories and New Myths on Proto-Bulgarians, Note on contributors, Index of names

Biography

Lucian Boia is Professor of History at the University of Bucharest,

Claudia-Florentina Dobre has a doctorate in history from Laval University, Québec (2007). She is currently the director of Centre for Memory and Identity Studies and an associate researcher at the Regional Center of Advanced Studies in Social Sciences (CeReFREA), University of Bucharest. She has published extensively on the memory of Romanian communnism and political persecution, museums, monuments, and memorials, and on everyday life under communism.

Cristian Emilian Ghita has a PhD in classics and ancient history from the University of Exeter. His interests include Hellenistic studies, Asia Minor, and ancient warfare, Asiatic mythologies, cultural memory. He is the editor-in-chief of MemoScapes: Romanian Journal of Memory and Identity Studies.