Contents
Preface
Acknowledgments
Introduction: Memory Traces: On Local Practices of Remembering
and Commemorating
1. Death and Ritual: Mourning and Commemorative Practices before
1914
2. Mourning, Burying, and Remembering the War Dead: How Communities
Coped with the Memory of Wartime Violence, 1918-1940
3. Remembering the Great War through Autobiographical
Narratives
4. The Politics of Commemoration in Interwar Romania, 1919-1940:
Dialogues and Conflicts
5. War Commemorations and State Propaganda under Dictatorship: From
the Crusade against Bolshevism to Ceausescu's Cult of Personality,
1940-1989
6. Everyone a Victim: Forging the Mythology of Anti-Communism
Counter-Memory
7. The Dilemmas of Post-Memory in Post-Communist Romania
Notes
Selected Bibliography
Index
The cultural politics of commemorating war
Maria Bucur is John W. Hill Chair in East European History and Associate Professor of History at Indiana University Bloomington. She is author of Eugenics and Modernization in Interwar Romania and editor (with Nancy M. Wingfield) of Gender and War in Twentieth-Century Eastern Europe (IUP, 2006).
"Heroes and Victims demonstrates not only how individual, local, and national discourses of remembrance have operated in the complex geopolitical and ethnic world of 20th-century Romania but also how and why post-communist Romanians and others in the 21st century have moved to a post-memory discourse." Melissa Bokovoy, University of New Mexico "An important book by one of the major emerging voices in east European studies." Charles King, Georgetown University
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