[es-ES]Change language[es-ES]
Sidebar content Main content
[es-ES]Record tools[es-ES]
[es-ES]Displays[es-ES]

A disturbed silence: discourse on the Holocaust in the Soviet west as an anti-site of memory

Remove from selection
Add to selection
Descripción

Public memory of the Holocaust has been growing in importance in Eastern Europe since 1991. At the same time, new pressures have emerged to subordinate the Holocaust to nationalist narratives. This chapter focuses on official Soviet discourse in and about the city of Lviv in western Ukraine. The most effective contribution to this growing literature is Jan Gross's "Neighbors", and the debate and research in and beyond Poland that it sparked. Excising the Jews from the Holocaust was a major Soviet story but not the only one

AIS utiliza cookies estrictamente necesarias para mejorar la experiencia del usuario.
This website also uses analytical cookies.