Competing Historical Narratives: Memory Politics, Identity, and Democracy in Germany and Poland

Author:

Schmidtke Oliver1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Centre for Global Studies, Department of Political Science, University of Victoria, Victoria, BC V8P 5C2, Canada

Abstract

This article considers the growing rift between Western and Eastern Europe regarding the commemoration of Europe’s recent past and related historical narratives of nationhood that shape contemporary political preferences. More specifically, it investigates the connections between collective memory, national identities, and democratic cultures as they manifest themselves in Germany and Poland. With the help of an interpretative analysis focused on the discourse of political elites in both countries, the article identifies competing ways of interpreting 20th-century history and providing it with meaning for contemporary audiences. The national case studies of Germany and Poland present a contrasting logic in this respect: the promise of freedom and democracy in Poland is primarily narrated as the liberation from foreign rule and the desire for national independence. This narration is significantly built around a notion of popular sovereignty in which dissenting views of the heroic national past tend to be discredited and largely banned from public debate. In contrast, in Germany, the memory of fascism and the Holocaust has established a stronger rights-based approach to democracy in the liberal tradition and an openness to contesting historical narratives in the public domain.

Funder

Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada

Erasmus+ Program of the European Union

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

General Social Sciences

Reference74 articles.

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2. Assmann, Aleida (2011). Cultural Memory and Western Civilization: Functions, Media, Archives, Cambridge University Press.

3. Barna, Ildiko, Halicka, Beata, Oleksy, Piotr, Schmidtke, Oliver, and Wassenberg, Birte (2024). Mobilizing the Past: Memory Politics and Populism in Europe, Routledge. Book Manuscript Prepared for Routledge.

4. Mythscapes: Memory, mythology, and national identity;Bell;The British Journal of Sociology,2003

5. Oswald, Michael (2022). The Palgrave Handbook of Populism, Springer International Publishing.

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