1st Edition
The Use and Abuse of Memory Interpreting World War II in Contemporary European Politics
Introduction: Memories and Analogies of World War II
Christian Karner and Bram Mertens
1 Genocide Memorialization and the Europeanization of Europe
Henning Grunwald
2 Appeasement Analogies in British Parliamentary Debates Preceding the 2003 Invasion of Iraq
Joseph Burridge
3 How Deeply Rooted Is the Commitment to "Never Again"? Dick Bengtsson's Swastikas and European Memory Culture
Tanja Schult
4 Cultural Memories of German Suffering during the Second World War: An Inability Not to Mourn?
Karl Wilds
5 From Perpetrators to Victims and Back Again: The Long Shadow of the Second World War in Belgium
Bram Mertens
6 L'Histoire bling-bling Nicolas Sarkozy and the Historians
Paul Smith
7 The Pasts of the Present: World War II Memories and the Construction of Political Legitimacy in Post Cold War Italy
Bjorn Thomassen and Rosario Forlenza
8 "The Nazis Strike Again": The Concept of "The German Enemy," Party Strategies, and Mass Perceptions through the Prism of the Greek Economic Crisis
Zinovia Lialiouti and Giorgos Bithymitris
9 Who Were the Anti-Fascists? Divergent Interpretations of WWII in Contemporary Post-Yugoslav History Textbooks
Jovana Mihajlovi Trbovc and Tamara Pavasovi Tro st
10 Multiple Dimensions and Discursive Contests in Austria's Mythscape
Christian Karner
11 World War II in Discourses of National Identification in Poland: An Intergenerational Perspective
Anna Duszak
12 From the "Reunification of the Ukrainian Lands" to "Soviet Occupation": The Molotov-Ribbentrop Pact in the Ukrainian Political Memory
Tatiana Zhurzhenko
13 "Often Very Harmful Things Start Out with Things That Are Very Harmless": European Reflections on Guilt and Innocence Inspired by Art about the Holocaust in the 1990s
Diana I. Popescu
14 Epilogue
Christian Karner and Bram Mertens
List of Contributors
Index
Biography
Christian Karner






