Table of Contents
Introduction
Eric Langenbacher, Bill Niven,&Ruth Wittlinger
Chapter 1. Dynamics of Generational Memory: Understanding the East-West Divide
Harald Wydra
Chapter 2. Time-out for National Heroes? Gender as an Analytical Category in the Study of Memory Cultures
Helle Bjerg&Claudia Lenz
Chapter 3. The Memory-Market Dictum: Gauging the Inherent Bias in Different Data Sources Common in Collective Memory Studies
Mark A. Wolfgram
Chapter 4. Remembering WWII in Europe - Structures of Remembrance
Christian Gudehus
Chapter 5. Ach(tung) Europa: German Writers and the Establishment of a Collective Memory of Europe
Hans-Joachim Hahn
Chapter 6. Critiquing the Stranger, Inventing Europe: Integration and the Fascist Legacy
Mark Wagstaff
Chapter 7. The Thread That Binds Together: Lidice, Oradour, Putten, and the Memory of World War II
Madelon de Keizer
Chapter 8. Memory of World War II in France: National and Transnational Dynamics
Henning Meyer
Chapter 9. The Field of the Blackbirds and the Battle for Europe
Anna Di Lellio
Chapter 10. Transformation of Memory in Croatia: Removing Yugoslav Anti-Fascism
Ljiljana Radonic
Chapter 11. German Victimhood Discourse in Comparative Perspective
Bill Niven
Chapter 12. Shaking off the Past? The New Germany in the New Europe
Ruth Wittlinger
Conclusion: A Plea for an “Intergovernmental” European Memory
Eric Langenbacher
Notes on Contributors
Bibliography
Index