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Rethinking History, Reframing Identity [electronic resource] : Memory, Generations, and the Dynamics of National Identity in Poland / by Alexandra Wangler.

By: Wangler, Alexandra [author.].
Contributor(s): SpringerLink (Online service).
Material type: materialTypeLabelBookPublisher: Wiesbaden : VS Verlag für Sozialwissenschaften, 2012Description: 347p. 7 illus. online resource.Content type: text Media type: computer Carrier type: online resourceISBN: 9783531192260.Subject(s): Social sciences | Social Sciences | Social Sciences, generalDDC classification: 300 Online resources: Click here to access online
Contents:
Introduction: National Identity in Eastern Europe after Communism -- National Identity as a Process -- The Life Course and Social Change -- Methodology -- The Ukrainians in Poland: Social Structure and History -- Homeland and Belonging as Factors of National Identity -- Overcoming the Past: Experience, Memory and the Present -- Talking about Identity and Prejudices: Interweaving Sameness and Otherness -- Religion, Language and Traditions in Everyday Life -- Conclusions: Explaining Heterogeneity in National Identity by Means of Generational Change.
In: Springer eBooksSummary: This book contributes to the theoretical and methodological discussion about how the diverging experiences of generations and their historical memories play a role in the process of national identity formation. Drawing from narratives gathered within the Ukrainian minority in northern Poland and centered on the collective trauma of Action Vistula, where in 1947 about 140,000 Ukrainians were resettled from south-eastern Poland and relocated to the north-western areas, this study shows that three generations vary considerably with regard to their understandings of home, integration, history and religion. Thus, generational differences are an essential element in the analysis and understanding of social and political change. The findings of this study provide a contribution to debates about the process based nature of national identity, the role of trauma in creating generational consciousness and how generations should be conceptualized.
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Introduction: National Identity in Eastern Europe after Communism -- National Identity as a Process -- The Life Course and Social Change -- Methodology -- The Ukrainians in Poland: Social Structure and History -- Homeland and Belonging as Factors of National Identity -- Overcoming the Past: Experience, Memory and the Present -- Talking about Identity and Prejudices: Interweaving Sameness and Otherness -- Religion, Language and Traditions in Everyday Life -- Conclusions: Explaining Heterogeneity in National Identity by Means of Generational Change.

This book contributes to the theoretical and methodological discussion about how the diverging experiences of generations and their historical memories play a role in the process of national identity formation. Drawing from narratives gathered within the Ukrainian minority in northern Poland and centered on the collective trauma of Action Vistula, where in 1947 about 140,000 Ukrainians were resettled from south-eastern Poland and relocated to the north-western areas, this study shows that three generations vary considerably with regard to their understandings of home, integration, history and religion. Thus, generational differences are an essential element in the analysis and understanding of social and political change. The findings of this study provide a contribution to debates about the process based nature of national identity, the role of trauma in creating generational consciousness and how generations should be conceptualized.

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