MARADA, Radim. Nostalgic reconstruction and historical preservation: two regimes of post-communist urban memory. In CULTHIST14. 2014.
Other formats:   BibTeX LaTeX RIS
Basic information
Original name Nostalgic reconstruction and historical preservation: two regimes of post-communist urban memory
Name in Czech Nostalgické rekonstrukce a zachování historického dědictví: dva režimy postkomunistické městské paměti
Authors MARADA, Radim (203 Czech Republic, guarantor, belonging to the institution).
Edition CULTHIST14, 2014.
Other information
Original language English
Type of outcome Presentations at conferences
Field of Study 50000 5. Social Sciences
Country of publisher Turkey
Confidentiality degree is not subject to a state or trade secret
RIV identification code RIV/00216224:14230/14:00074079
Organization unit Faculty of Social Studies
Keywords in English regimes of collective memory; cultural heritage; nostalgia
Changed by Changed by: doc. PhDr. Ing. Radim Marada, Ph.D., učo 2654. Changed: 10/11/2014 17:19.
Abstract
Conventional studies in post-communist urban memory all too often focus on capital cities and the memory work of museums, monuments and memorials. Contrary to this trend, the proposed paper turns attention to past oriented urban/architectural reconstructions of peripheral cities taking place in Central Eastern Europe since the early 1990s. It shows how the intensified competition among cities – triggered, e.g., by the booming tourist industry or the race for the status of the European Cultural Capital (an EU project, from which the capital cities are excluded) – brings about a heightened reflexivity to and re-construction of a specific historical legacy of peripheral cities, and how this process transforms and sometimes complicates the picture of a shared national past. It argues that while the capital cities readily take on the task of representing national traumas or triumphs, the peripheral cities have more often built their identities or images by architecturally echoing nostalgic pasts, exploiting less dramatic and therefore sometimes more appealing narratives of nationalization and modernization. The thesis is in detail illustrated on Moravian cases of urban revitalization of Brno’s functionalist heritage and Ostrava’s early industrialism, while tentative comparisons are made with similar center-periphery differences in the case of Germany and Hungary. The distinction and inter-play between the imperative of preservation of historical heritage and multiple nostalgic narratives – general respect to the past and cultural re-connection with variously imagined pasts – provides an important conceptual background to the argument.
Abstract (in Czech)
není k dispozici
Links
GAP404/12/2531, research and development projectName: Kolektivní paměť a proměna městského prostoru
Investor: Czech Science Foundation, Collective memory and the transformation of urban space
PrintDisplayed: 19/9/2024 04:14