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No Neighbors' Lands in Postwar Europe: Vanishing Others

No Neighbors' Lands in Postwar Europe: Vanishing Others

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  • Anna Wylegala
  • Palgrave MacMillan
  • Paperback
  • 9783031108594
  • -
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  • History > Europe - General
  • English
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Book Description

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.
No Neighbors' Lands in Postwar Europe: Vanishing Others

Author Bio

Dr. Anna Wylegala is Assistant Professor, Institute of Philosophy and Sociology, Polish Academy of Sciences (Poland). She earned her PhD in Sociology from the Graduate School for Social Research, Warsaw (Poland). Dr. Wylegala speaks Polish natively, English and Ukrainian fluently, and possesses linguistic skills in German and Russian. 

She has given several lectures including, “Remembering Holocaust in contemporary Ukraine: a Galician case study” for Association for Jewish Studies 45th Annual Conference, December 2013, Boston; "Children’s experience of the deportation and cultural adaptation: comparative study of biographical narratives from Poland and Ukraine" for War Children in the Post-war: A West-East perspective on child policies, child experiences and war childhood remembrance cultures in Europe since 1945, Ludwig Boltzmann Institute for European History and Public Spheres, Vienna, December 2012; "In a search of common European historical experience: memory of postwar deportations and resettlements in Poland and Ukraine" for Towards a Common Past? Conflicting Memories in Contemporary Europe, May 2012, University of Lund, Sweden; "Polish and German memory of postwar deportations: case study of the small town in Polish “Regained Lands” for International Oral History Association Conference, July 2010, Prague. 

While in residence in the Jack, Joseph and Morton Mandel Center for Advanced Holocaust Studies Dr. Wylegala worked on her project, “The Social Anthropology of Filling the Void: Poland and Ukraine after World War II.”

Dr. Wylegala has several published works, including “Displacement and memory. Case study of social memory” (Poland and Ukraine), Toru?: Wydawnictwo Naukwoe UMK, 2014; “Heroes or Villains? Memory of the UPA Partisans in Western Ukraine” in 20 lat rzeczywisto?ci poradzieckiej, M. G?owacka-Grajper ed. (2012); “Memory and Forgetness on the ruines. Holocaust of Zhovkva’s Jews in the Consciousness of the Contemporary Inhabitants of the Town” in Ho?okost i suczasnist (2011); and “Minority language as identity factor: case study of the young Russian-speakers in Lviv” in International Journal of Sociology of Language, J. Fishman and V. Kulyk eds., (2010).

 

Fellowship Research

For her Norman Raab Foundation Fellowship Dr. Wylegala explored the collections of the Museum in order to aid her with the Jewish portion of her larger project about the void left in Poland and Ukraine, especially Galicia, after the Holocaust. For residents of Galicia in the early 20th century, society as they knew it was completely destroyed and was replaced with a void after the Holocaust. Dr. Wylegala attempted to explain why this void was filled the way it was and why those that left the region chose to do so.

Dr. Wylegala was in residence at the Mandel Center from January 1 to March 31, 2014. 

 

Source: United States Holocaust Memorial Museum 

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