Abstract

Introduction. Reclaiming the Personal: Oral History in Post-Socialist Europe (Natalia Khanenko-Friesen and Gelinada Grinchenko) PART ONE. From Subjects to Agents of History: Political Implications of Oral Historical Research 1. Political Changes and Personal Orientations: Germany and the European Remembrance Cultures (Alexander von Plato) 2. Empowering Files: Secret Police Records and Life Narratives of Former Political Prisoners of the Communist Era in Poland (Anna Witeska-Mlynarczyk) 3. Memory Silenced and Contested: Oral History of the Finnish Occupation of Soviet Karelia (Alexey Golubev) PART TWO. Reclaiming the Personal: Beyond the Collective Vision of History 4. Restoring the Meaning: Biographic Work in Ostarbeiters' Life Stories (Yelena Rozhdestvenskaya) 5. We Are Silent about Ourselves: Discussing Career and Daily Life with Female Academics in Russia and Belarus (Natalia Pushkareva) 6. A Commentator or a Character in a Story? The Problem of the Narrator in Oral History (Rozalia Cherepanova) PART THREE. Past Differentiated: Revisiting the Second World War and Its Aftermath 7. Experience and Narrative: Anti-Communist Armed Underground in Poland, 1945-1956 (Marta Kurkowska-Budzan) 8. Forced Labour in Nazi Germany in the Interviews of Former Child Ostarbeiters (Gelinada Grinchenko) PART FOUR. Locating Other Memories of Late Socialism 9. Renew the Face of the Land, of This Land! Catholic Culture and the Crises of Sacralization in People's Poland (David Curp) 10. In Search of History's Other Agents: Oral History of Decollectivization in Ukraine in the 1990s (Natalia Khanenko-Friesen) 11. Where Has Everything Gone? Remembering Perestroika in Belarusian Provinces (Irina Makhovskaya and Irina Romanova)

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call