Memory and social movements in modern and contemporary history : remembering past struggles and resourcing protest

Zusammenfassung: Reflecting the growing interest of historians in memory studies, this edited collection examines the relationship between memory and global social movements from 1848 to the present. For a long time, there has been little attempt by historians to consider memory and social activism...

Ausführliche Beschreibung

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Bibliographische Detailangaben
HerausgeberIn: Berger, Stefan
Koller, Christian
Sonstige: SpringerLink (Online service)
Ort / Verlag / Datum:Cham : Palgrave Macmillan, [2024]
Erscheinungsjahr:2024
Sprache:Englisch
Serie:Palgrave Studies in the History of Social Movements
Klassifikation:303.484
Beschreibung:xix, 306 Seiten; Illustrationen
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Inhaltsangabe:
  • Chapter 1. Introduction; Stefan Berger and Christian Koller
  • Chapter 2. Framing the Collective Memory: The Politics of Mobilisations against Hydropower Projects in Maharashtra, India, 1980–2004; Arnab Roy Chowdhury
  • Chapter 3. Seeds as a Site for Humanistic Inquiry: Mapping Memory and Movement through ‘Sovereign Forest’; Jawhar Cholakkathodi
  • Chapter 4. Constructing the History of Working-Class Neighbourhoods: Communicative and Cognitive Referencing to the Past in Conflicts over Urban Redevelopment in 1970s and 1980s West-German Cities; Sebastian Haumann
  • Chapter 5. Memory of Serfdom and the Peasant Rebellion in Lesko Poviat; Michał Rauszer
  • Chapter 6. Revolutionary Memory and the Genesis of the State: A Failed ‘Dress Rehearsal’ and a Changed Script in Polish Socialist Movements 1905-1920; Wiktor Marzec
  • Chapter 7. Martyrs of the Labour Movement? Commemoration of Protest Casualties in Switzerland; Christian Koller
  • Chapter 8. Negotiating the Past: 2009’s General Strike in theFrench Caribbean and the Colonial Past; Christian Jacobs
  • Chapter 9. Mind the Gap: Gay Activism and the Remembrance of Gay Victims at the Dachau Memorial Site; Gabriele Fischer & Katharina Ruhland
  • Chapter 10. Imoinda in Berlin: Feminists and the Cultural Memory of Slavery After 1848; Sophie van den Elzen
  • Chapter 11. Remembering Tolstoyans: The Soviet/Russian Independent Peace Movement in Search of Russian Historical Tradition of Pacifism; Irina A. Gordeeva
  • Chapter 12. Spain, Munich, Auschwitz: The Role of Historical Analogies in the Protest Movements in Europe against the War in Bosnia and Herzegovina, 1992-1995; Nicolas Philipp Moll
  • Chapter 13. History, Memory and the Populist Right in Germany from the Second World War to the Present Day; Stefan Berger