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Whose Memory? Which Future? Remembering Ethnic Cleansing and Lost Cultural Diversity in Eastern, Central and Southeastern Europe. Ed. Barbara Törnquist-Plewa . Studies in Contemporary European History, Vol. 18. New York: Berghahn Books, 2016. viii, 233 pp. Notes. Bibliography. Index. Illustrations. Photographs. $95.00, hard bound.

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Whose Memory? Which Future? Remembering Ethnic Cleansing and Lost Cultural Diversity in Eastern, Central and Southeastern Europe. Ed. Barbara Törnquist-Plewa . Studies in Contemporary European History, Vol. 18. New York: Berghahn Books, 2016. viii, 233 pp. Notes. Bibliography. Index. Illustrations. Photographs. $95.00, hard bound.

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  23 October 2017

Katarina Ristić*
Affiliation:
Helmut-Schmidt-University, University of the Federal Armed Forces Hamburg
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Abstract

Type
Book Reviews
Copyright
Copyright © Association for Slavic, East European, and Eurasian Studies 2017 

The edited volume Whose Memory? Which Future? is comprised of seven chapters that theorize the formation of collective memory about mass violence in eastern, central, and southeastern Europe, with an excellent introduction and concluding chapter by volume editor Barbara Törnquist-Plewa. The book grew out from a research project at Lund University, enabling relatively consistent analysis of six different cases from Poland, the Czech Republic, Ukraine, Croatia, and Bosnia.

The book itself is the best argument in favor of comparative work in memory studies. The same research question, namely “how does the present day population relate to the memory of ethnic cleansing and the cultural heritage of the people that vanished?” (4), was addressed using different methods, sources, and disciplines, revealing complex memory dynamics vis-à-vis the Second World War (with the exception of Bosnia case). The research project's multidisciplinarity is an advantage rather than weakness of the book. It enables the reader to critically examine comparative advantages of different approaches, for example participant observation, skillfully used by Dragan Nikolić. It also provides a more intimate understanding of memory activism in Višegrad, compared to interviews with Wroclaw's inhabitants, which enable an insight into dynamics between individual and collective memory formation. Similarly, use of different sources such as urban landscapes, historiographical texts, tourist guides, and local and national newspapers in Tea Sindbæk Andersen's exceptional article on the memory of Zaratinis in Zadar, enables differentiation between micro changes and layered identities that might have been overlooked by a more state-centered research approach. In other chapters, carefully examined cases show alliances, cooperation, and confrontations between the actors on different levels (international, transnational, national, local), contextualizing the creation of collective memory within globalization and Europeanization processes. Tomas Sniegon's outstanding comparison of monuments, locations, memory actors, and their intentions in erecting four memorials to Sudeten Germans in the Czech Republic exemplifies the importance of detailed examination in each case, showing how subtle the dissonances in memory production might be.

One of the most intriguing results of the comparison is the prevailing reluctance to acknowledge the mass atrocities as moral wrongs, something shared to a different degree by all current majority populations. Despite the liberalization of public space in post-communist countries, the inclusion of victims' memories remains on the level of proclamation, while the justification of violence remains intact, whether as “deserved destiny” (221) or “rightful anger of the harassed citizens” (66). Public discourse remains persistently lacking in genuine empathy for victims. Simultaneously, the passage of time and the generational shift has produced some change—the hegemonic communist narrative has been challenged, new memory practices have been established, but argumentation schemes justifying violence seem to have been inherited from the hegemonic narrative. In comparison with more recent conflict and memory activism in Višegrad, where hegemonic narratives are still strongly defended, it might be asked to what extent the “other” as perceived threat consolidates hegemonic narratives, a question which was insufficiently addressed by the authors in the volume.

All the chapters share an assumption of western Europe as normative power, which sets values and norms for memory activism on the one hand, and as political power that can accelerate if not initiate memory activism, on the other. Normative order is interpreted based on the request to acknowledge responsibility for mass violations of human rights and include the victims' memory in current memory practices, referring to Jeffrey Olick's “Politics of Regret” as reconciliation narrative, or even cosmopolitan attitudes and identification as part of memory politics pursued by international organizations like the European Union (EU), UNESCO, and others. According to the editor, the main aim of the book was “to contribute to more ethical approaches in discussions on how Europe should remember its difficult past” (11).

Several chapters show how recovering or discovering the prewar “Germanness” of east European cities served as a means to recontextualize east European cities as historically western, pointing out the importance of city branding and the so-called Heimat tourism as motivation and goal for memory activism. As noted by Niklas Bernsand, minorities like Belarusians or Azeris remain excluded from multicultural narratives in Chernivtsi, despite the fact that their communities are more numerous than Germans or Jews (122). This seems to prove that the usefulness of the past for the future, rather than moral considerations, play highly significant roles in memory politics.

In the final chapter, Barbara Törnquist-Plewa uses three of the four types of memory activism developed by Michael Bernhard and Jan Kubik (Twenty Years after Communism: The Politics of Memory and Commemoration, 2014), namely mnemonic warriors, mnemonic pluralists, and mnemonic abnegators, to interpret memory activism presented in the studies. She concludes that abnegators remain dominant in Zadar (Croatia) and Višegrad (Bosnia), while the dismantling of the homogenic narrative appeared in four sites of Czech memory, Wroclaw (Poland), and L΄viv (Ukraine), where more mnemonic pluralists actively engage in the memory scene. Although neither of these cases present a clear-cut difference between types of actors, the most confusing is the case of Chernivtsi (Ukraine), where all three types operate and overlap. Despite this mnemonic pluralism, Törnquist-Plewa questions if these practices exemplify cosmopolitan, internalized values such as human rights and respect for all human life, as promoted by international and transnational actors, or if they remain subjected to ethnic-nationalism, paying lip-service to EU integration or pragmatically using EU funds for the creation of a new positive self-image.

In conclusion, it might be said that the book can be seen as an invitation, or rather urgent request, to engage more in comparative memory research on the one hand, and to reflect on the possibility of shared European memory politics, on the other. The book is not only highly informative and meticulously researched but also intellectually engaging and provocative. Tacit assumptions that reconciliation as a part of cosmopolitanism already figure as shared normative frames in Europe require better understanding of European memory politics and particularly ethnic-nationalist memory within the EU. The volume demonstrates the use of memory as usable past, but also shows that there are limits to the pragmatic exploration of the past, and that further comparative research of these limits might provide much needed understanding of contradicting forces driving memory creation in Europe today.