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This book focuses on the social voids that were the result of occupation, genocide, mass killings, and population movements in Europe during and after the Second World War. Historians, sociologists, and anthropologists adopt comparative perspectives on those who now lived in 'cleansed' borderlands. Its contributors explore local subjectivities of social change through the concept of 'No Neighbors' Lands' How does it feel to wear the dress of your murdered neighbor? How does one get used to friends, colleagues, and neighbors no longer being part of everyday life? How is moral, social, and legal order reinstated after one part of the community participated in the ethnic cleansing of another? How is order restored psychologically in the wake of neighbors watching others being slaughtered by external enemies? This book sheds light on how destroyed European communities, once multi-ethnic and multi-religious, experienced postwar reconstruction, attempted to come to terms with what had happened, and negotiated remembrance.Chapter 7 and 13 are available open access under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License via link.springer.com.
This book is a comparative case study of collective memory in two small communities in Poland and Ukraine, depopulated as result of ethnic cleansing and deportation. Based on more than 150 personal interviews, it describes a common fate of many post-war European localities, destroyed and rebuilt in a completely new shape.
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