Multiplicity in European Memory

This course is part of the programme
Master's Degree Programme Humanities Studies

Objectives and competences

The aim of the course is:
To provide a broad overview of contemporary theoretical and conceptual approaches that address processes of historicization and/or memorialization in contemporary European society.
To develop students' critical thinking about the different processes of social memory creation and the "uses" of history.

Competencies:
Students develop skills in written and oral academic argumentation and discussion.
Students develop skills in critical thinking, media literacy, and the use of digital humanities resources.

Prerequisites

/

Content

Drawing on the vast field of memory studies, the course examines processes of memorialisation that are mutually contrasting, conflicting, dialogical and/or exclusionary, thus suggesting significantly different historical interpretations and political imaginaries. It takes the framework of Europe not only as a set of geographical foci, but also as a political and normative framework that constructs particular ideas of Europe. Both conceptions are critically assessed.

The course navigates students through various schools of thought on social/collective memories as negotiated, narrativized, politically mobilised, and a matter of affective engagement. It introduces concepts such as 'multidirectional memory' and 'communicative memory', as well as political debates on issues such as 'the paradigm of two European totalitarianisms' and 'European memory'. It critically discusses ideas of 'divided memory', 'conflict' and 'reconciliation' of memories, historical responsibility, history and justice, truth and denial. In addition, the division between political and family memories (public and private) is approached (also) as a gendered process.

Themes:
Influential concepts in the field of memory studies
Pan-European political memory projects (cases of Holocaust, post-socialism, anti/colonialism etc.)
Post-war reckoning with the past (cases of Germany, Yugoslavia, etc.)
Ideas of historical justice and responsibility
Normative approaches to collective memory and its critique
Strategies of public memorialisation (museums, commemorations, “memory laws”, etc.)
Actors of memorialisation (public, official, civil-society, vernacular, memory activism, etc.)
Gendered aspects of memorialisation
Print, electronic, and digital media and memory practices

Intended learning outcomes

After passing the exam, the student will:
Acquire a basic understanding of the concepts and academic paradigms within memory studies and other theoretical approaches that address the historicization and/or memory making in contemporary societies.
Critically write different types of texts (term papers, essays) in dialogue with critical reading of academic literature and primary sources.
Acquire basic methods of analysing practices of remembering, media and visual analysis, and become familiar with the range of digital humanities and gender-sensitive approaches.

Readings

  • Assmann, Jan. “Communicative and Cultural Memory.” V: Communicative and Cultural Memory, Astrid Erll & Ansgar Nünning (ur.), 109–18. De Gruyter, 2008. E-version
  • Brousek, Jan, Danijel Grafenauer, Werner Wintersteiner & Daniel Wutti (ur.). Slovenija - Österreich: Befreiendes Erinnern = Osvobajajoče spominjanje: Dialogische Aufarbeitung der Vergangenheit = Dialoško obravnavanje zgodovine. Klagenfurt / Celovec: Drava, 2020.
  • Daskalova, Krassimira, Maria Bucur, Ivana Pantelić, Biljana Dojčinović, Gabriela Dudeková, Sabina Žnidaršič Žagar, Nina Vodopivec, Şirin Tekeli & Oksana Kis. “Clio on the Margins: Women’s and Gender History in Central, Eastern and Southeastern Europe (Part One).” Aspasia 6, no. 1 (2012): 125–185. E-version
  • Ghodsee, Kristen. “Tale of ‘Two Totalitarianisms’: The Crisis of Capitalism and the Historical Memory of Communism.” History of the Present: A Journal of Critical History 4, no. 2 (2014): 115–142. E-version
  • Karstedt, Susanne (ur.). Legal Institutions and Collective Memories. Oxford: Hart Publishing, 2009. Catalogue
  • Kuljić, Todor. Kultura spominjanja. Ljubljana: Znanstvena založba Filozofske fakultete UL, 2012. Catalogue
  • McDowell, Sara & Máire Braniff. “Landscapes of Commemoration: The Relationship between Memory, Place and Space.” V: Commemoration as Conflict: Space, Memory and Identity in Peace Processes, 12-25. Houndmills: Palgrave Macmillan, 2014.
  • Mihajlović Trbovc, Jovana & Tamara Pavasović Trošt. “Who Were the Anti-Fascists? Divergent Interpretation of WWII in Contemporary Post-Yugoslav History Textbooks.” V: The Use and Abuse of Memory: Interpreting World War II in Contemporary European Politics, ur. Christian Karner & Bram Mertens, 173–92. Abingdon & New York: Routledge, 2017.
  • Milošević, Ana & Philippe Perchoc. “The European Parliament and memory politics: exploring the constellation of actors.” Politique européenne 71, no. 1 (2021): 6–27.
  • Olick, Jeffrey K., “The Politics of Regret: Analytical Frames” in The Politics of Regret: On Collective Memory and Historical Responsibility, 121-151. Routledge, 2007.
  • Petrović, Tanja. Towards an affective history of Yugoslavia. Filozofija i društvo 27, no. 3 (2016): 502-520. E-version
  • Petrović, Tanja. The political dimension of post-socialist memory practices: self-organized choirs in the former Yugoslavia. V: Defragmenting Yugoslavia, ur. Irena Ristić, 315-329. Regensburg: Südost-Institut. 2011. E-version
  • Rothberg, Michael. Multidirectional Memory: Remembering the Holocaust in the Age of Decolonization. Stanford: Stanford University Press, 2009. Catalogue
  • Sierp, Aline. “EU Memory Politics and Europe’s Forgotten Colonial Past.” Interventions 22, no. 6 (2020): 686–702. E-version
  • Todorova, Maria, ed. Remembering Communism: Genres of Representation. New York: Social Science Research Council, 2010.
  • Wüstenberg, Jenny, and Aline Sierp, eds. Agency in Transnational Memory Politics. New York; London: Berghahn, 2020. Catalogue

Assessment

regular and active participation in the reading seminar
the seminar paper and its presentation

Lecturer's references

Tanja Petrović is a linguist and anthropologist. She studied language and literature at the University of Belgrade and received her Ph.D. from the ISH in Ljubljana in 2005. Her Ph.D. thesis focused on the linguistic and identity strategies of a small Serbo-Croatian-speaking community in Bela Krajina, and sought to shed light on the relationship between the linguistic choices of the speakers and the broader social and political context.
Dr Petrović is interested in the meanings and uses of Yugoslav and socialist heritage in post-Yugoslav societies, as well as the cultural, linguistic, political and social processes that shape the realities of these societies. She delves into a range of issues, including the role of language in the formation of ideologies, memories and identities, histories of work and gender in the post-Yugoslav space, and the relationship between memory, heritage, and historiographical narratives of Yugoslav socialism. She has published numerous academic articles and several monographs in the fields of anthropology of post-socialism, memory studies, gender studies, heritage studies, linguistic anthropology and labour history.
Dr. Petrović is the Head of the Institute for Cultural and Memory Studies at ZRC SAZU and a full professor at the Graduate School of ZRC SAZU. She has been a fellow of the Centre for Advanced Studies in Sofia (2005-06), the Wissenschaftskolleg zu Berlin (2010-11), and The Netherlands Institute for Advanced Studies (2013-14). She is an Honorary Research Fellow of the Graduate School of East and Southeast European Studies at the University of Regensburg.