Ludmila Isurin “Memory, Identity and Imagination” by Serguey Ehrlich
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Iskra Schwarcz "He did not conquer anything, he returned!" What did Putin really want to say?


William Hirst. Reaching Across National Boundaries: The Problem of Memory. A Commentary of James Wer


Ludmila Isurin. “How nations remember:” Reflection on the intellectual power of James Wertsch’s...


Dimitris Stamatopoulos: “The Revolution as an attempt to make Greece a part of European culture”


Michael O’Hanlon. NATO Expansion, the U.S.-Russia Relationship, and Memory


James Wertsch: “It is often the case that someone outside a national community might have better...”


Per Rudling: “It is a sobering thought that ‘memory laws’ was originally a West European invention”
Memory landscapes in (post)Yugoslavia Edited by Milica Popović, Sciences Po CERI and University...


Senka Anastasova: “Anticipatory memory practices as a potentially potent tool in the fight...”


Elife Krasniqi: “Kosovar Albanian historiography reflects a long history of oppression...”


Ann Rigney: “We need also to understand why some people refuse to let go of cherished beliefs...”


Astrid Erll: “Nationalism is a nineteenth-century response to twenty-first century challenges”


Miloš Vukanović: “The descendants of Montenegrin Chetniks were extremely pro-American in the 1960s-1


Monika Palmberger: “There are practices of ‘border crossing’ and acts of solidarities before...”


Sanja Horvatinčić: “The story of Yugoslavia is used as a lesson on the acceptable version...”


Henry L. Roediger III: “There is little doubt that the Soviet contribution to the war effort is...”


Mitja Velikonja: "The transitional decades have been marked by a rather schizophrenic situation..."


Memory landscapes in (post)Yugoslavia. 1. The case of Republic of Serbia


Andreas Hilger: “The Fate of Soviet Pows and Forced Laborers is Underrepresented in German..."