Počet záznamů: 1  

Unrecognized Heroes and Conflicting Historical Heritage

  1. 1.
    SYSNO ASEP0543348
    Druh ASEPA - Abstrakt
    Zařazení RIVZáznam nebyl označen do RIV
    Zařazení RIVNení vybrán druh dokumentu
    NázevUnrecognized Heroes and Conflicting Historical Heritage
    Tvůrce(i) Pavlásek, Michal (UEF-S) RID
    Celkový počet autorů1
    AkceMezinárodní workshop Displaced Memories & Memories of Displacement. Vanquished Others, Silenced Past, and the Burden of Implication in the 21st Century
    Datum konání09.06.2021 - 11.06.2021
    Místo konáníPraha
    ZeměCZ - Česká republika
    Typ akceEUR
    Jazyk dok.eng - angličtina
    Klíč. slovaYugoslavia ; re-emigrants ; migration ; anti-Communist narrative ; politics of memory
    Vědní obor RIVAC - Archeologie, antropologie, etnologie
    Obor OECDAntropology, ethnology
    Institucionální podporaUEF-S - RVO:68378076
    AnotaceIn my paper I will follow the trajectory of a group of re-emigrants, which made them to form their own memory community. Czech members of a partisan unit, which was part of the antifascist Communist resistant movement in Yugoslavia during the Second World War, answered the call from Czechoslovakia, and they and their families replaced German residents who had been expelled. Those arriving were welcomed by the state as antifascist heroes, but they perceive the period of the fall of the Communist regime in 1989 and the subsequent production of a hegemonic anti-Communist narrative of the new liberal-democratic regime as a path to the unrecognition of their historical legacy, and, as a consequence, of their family honour. They see the occasion to return both of them in the definition of their position in entanglement of politics of memory, conflicting historical heritage, and interpretations of contemporary migrations.
    Překlad anotaceIn my paper I will follow the trajectory of a group of re-emigrants, which made them to form their own memory community. Czech members of a partisan unit, which was part of the antifascist Communist resistant movement in Yugoslavia during the Second World War, answered the call from Czechoslovakia, and they and their families replaced German residents who had been expelled. Those arriving were welcomed by the state as antifascist heroes, but they perceive the period of the fall of the Communist regime in 1989 and the subsequent production of a hegemonic anti-Communist narrative of the new liberal-democratic regime as a path to the unrecognition of their historical legacy, and, as a consequence, of their family honour. They see the occasion to return both of them in the definition of their position in entanglement of politics of memory, conflicting historical heritage, and interpretations of contemporary migrations.
    PracovištěEtnologický ústav
    KontaktVeronika Novotná, novotna@eu.cas.cz, Tel.: 532 290 277
    Rok sběru2022
Počet záznamů: 1  

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