Zeitschrift für Ostmitteleuropa-Forschung (Sep 2023)

Erinnerungskultur im Wandel? Tschechische Orte der Erinnerung an die antideutsche Nachkriegsgewalt

  • Michal Korhel

DOI
https://doi.org/10.25627/202372311392
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 72, no. 3
pp. 377 – 409

Abstract

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In the summer of 1945, following German occupation and the atrocities committed during World War II, the German minority living in the reestablished Czechoslovak state was ex-posed to violent acts of retribution. Despite the state authorities’ initial endeavors to prose-cute some of the acts of violence committed after the war, the Communist takeover in February 1948 rendered the post-war persecution of Germans taboo in Czechoslovakia. It was only the Velvet Revolution of 1989 that paved the way for both academic discussion and public commemoration of those tragic events. However, it was only at the turn of the millennium that the Czech society’s stance towards the post-war violence started to change. The initial taboo and resentment were partially replaced by public opinion as¬sessing post–World War II anti-German violence more critically. Newly established sites of memory dedicated to post–World War II violence are often seen as one of the signs of a changing culture of remembrance in Czech Republic. There is, however, a lack of rigorous research exploring these monuments and plaques. The aim of this study is to analyze vari¬ous aspects of these sites as part of a social framework shaping public opinion in the Czech Republic on a local level. In doing so, it seeks to answer the question of how Czech society is coming to terms with the “negatives” of its past. Drawing on oral history interviews, the paper explores the process of establishing current sites commemorating anti-German vio¬lence in today’s Czech Republic, as well as the often grass-roots initiatives that lay behind them. Furthermore, the analysis will focus on the monuments’ inscriptions and the mes¬sage they send to the public, shaping its historical awareness. Understanding society as a structure consisting of various memory communities, the paper contributes to the under-re¬searched area of a Czech culture of remembrance at a local level.

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