1st Edition

Post-Communist Poland – Contested Pasts and Future Identities

By Ewa Ochman Copyright 2013
    206 Pages 9 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    224 Pages 9 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    This book explores the reinterpretations of Poland’s past which have been undertaken by Polish national and local elites since the fall of communism. It focuses on remembrance practices and traces the de-commemorating of communism to examine the ways in which collective remembering and forgetting shapes present power constellations in Poland and impacts on foreign and domestic policy. The book outlines the detail of the new hegemonic national myths which are being established but also investigates fragmentation and diversification of commemorative practices at the local level that has the most potential to challenge the dominant vision of national Polish identity, historically centred on martyrdom, heroism and independence, as less relevant to Poland’s new aspirations for the future.

    Introduction  Part 1  1. Poland in Transition and Reckoning with the Past  2. National Mythologies and the Re-shaping of Memorial Landscape  3. European Memory and Common History Projects  Part 2  4. Legislating Sites of National Memory  5. Legislating the De-communisation of Public Space  6. The Enduring Legacy of the People’s Republic Part 3  7. Municipalities and the Search for the Local Past  8. Contested Local Past and Fragmented Politics of Memory  9. Monuments, Commemorative Space and Rescaling of Memory  Conclusion

    Biography

    Ewa Ochman is an Academic Fellow in the Department of Russian and east European Studies, University of Manchester, UK.