Podchaser Logo
Home
Second Keynote and Concluding Remarks; The Hegemonic Rememberance in Post Communist Eastern Europe

Second Keynote and Concluding Remarks; The Hegemonic Rememberance in Post Communist Eastern Europe

Released Friday, 5th June 2020
Good episode? Give it some love!
Second Keynote and Concluding Remarks; The Hegemonic Rememberance in Post Communist Eastern Europe

Second Keynote and Concluding Remarks; The Hegemonic Rememberance in Post Communist Eastern Europe

Second Keynote and Concluding Remarks; The Hegemonic Rememberance in Post Communist Eastern Europe

Second Keynote and Concluding Remarks; The Hegemonic Rememberance in Post Communist Eastern Europe

Friday, 5th June 2020
Good episode? Give it some love!
Rate Episode

Jelena Subotic gives the second and final keynote of the conference, chaired by Jessie Barton-Hronesova. Followed by concluding remarks and next step plans by Jessie Barton-Hronesova and Johana Wyss. KEYNOTE II: THE HEGEMONIC NARRATIVES OF HOLOCAUST REMEMBRANCE IN POST-COMMUNIST EASTERN EUROPEJelena Subotic (Georgia State U); chaired by Jessie Barton-Hronesova (University of Oxford).

Concluding RemarksJessie Barton-Hronesova (University of Oxford) and Johana Wyss (IE, Czech Academy of Sciences and Max Planck): summary and next steps

Show More
Rate

From The Podcast

Hegemonic Narratives

Memory politics worldwide is often shaped by the dynamics of relations and tensions between hegemonic narratives, counter-memories and silent communities at the global, national and local levels. Transnational advocacy movements, international agents and organisations influence the application of terminologies and frameworks in which global hegemonic narratives operate. State actors influence and shape hegemonic narratives, silence others or deny their existence in order to legitimise their incumbency and state/nation-building efforts. Local actors – from civil society groups to individuals – often counter top-down efforts of hegemonic narratives by the creation of their own narratives, memories or by silence. In post-conflict and conflict societies the relations between different groups and actors advocating hegemonic narratives becomes all the more acute and tense as the social and political fabric is eroded and in flux by the conflict-generated transformative changes. ​How do we understand hegemonic narratives in post-war societies? What do we know about them? How can we conceptualise hegemonic narratives in research inquiry? What constitutes such narratives in societies emerging from conflicts or in the midst of conflict? What is their role in relation to other mnemonic practices such as silencing, forgetting, neglecting, amnesia, or denial? And if they are, in what way do they differ? This symposium seeks to discuss these and other questions using a large number of case studies that can speak to some aspects of memory politics and hegemonic narratives. The key aims of this day-long symposium are to:​Discuss the dynamics of hegemonic narratives at local, national and global level with a special reference to post-conflict situations;Examine the various roles of actors, agents and institutions in shaping, organising, influencing, challenging and transforming memories and key narratives in (post-)conflict societies;Facilitate an interdisciplinarity discussion in memory and a cross-disciplinary debates about the roles of memory in post-war societies;Theorise and conceptualise different types, approaches to studies of memory, silence, forgetting and remembering; Discuss the various roles of victims, perpetrators and new conflict-engendered communities.

Join Podchaser to...

  • Rate podcasts and episodes
  • Follow podcasts and creators
  • Create podcast and episode lists
  • & much more

Episode Tags

Do you host or manage this podcast?
Claim and edit this page to your liking.
,

Unlock more with Podchaser Pro

  • Audience Insights
  • Contact Information
  • Demographics
  • Charts
  • Sponsor History
  • and More!
Pro Features