VACKOVÁ, Barbora and Nina BARTOŠOVÁ. Baťovany – Partizánske: contemporary re/inventing the history of the Baťa company town. In SIEF 2023 Congres: Living Uncertainty. 2023.
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Basic information
Original name Baťovany – Partizánske: contemporary re/inventing the history of the Baťa company town
Authors VACKOVÁ, Barbora and Nina BARTOŠOVÁ.
Edition SIEF 2023 Congres: Living Uncertainty, 2023.
Other information
Original language English
Type of outcome Presentations at conferences
Field of Study 50401 Sociology
Country of publisher Czech Republic
Confidentiality degree is not subject to a state or trade secret
WWW URL
Organization unit Faculty of Education
Keywords in English Baťa; Partizánske; Slovak Republic; urban heritage; historic heritage
Tags International impact
Changed by Changed by: Mgr. Barbora Vacková, Ph.D., učo 22034. Changed: 28/11/2023 10:57.
Abstract
The Baťa Shoe Company established the settlement of Šimonovany-Baťovany (from 1949 Partizánske, Slovakia) literally a few weeks before the Munich Agreement and shortly before the establishment of the Slovak State and Protectorate of Bohemia and Moravia. During wartime, the factory operated successfully but had no chance to develop the company system as it worked in Zlín thoroughly. Thus, the main goal of this paper is to describe the patterns of creating the city's past, which can objectively be said to have never had a chance to exist. Therefore, we ask: - What does it mean "Baťa/baťa" in remembering and constructing the past of this particular town? - Could be the reinvention of Baťa past interpreted as the mechanism of re-framing the Slovak State period? - What is emphasized and what is suppressed in the contemporary narrative of the past in Partizánske? During WWII, several local anti-fascist groups were formed among the company's employees. After nationalization in 1945 and the coup d'état in 1948, the communist regime promoted the one-sided narrative of Baťa as a capitalist exploiter, and the city was renamed to memorize these WWII partisans groups. After the revolution in 1989, residents, local politicians, historians and workers in culture began reinventing the Baťa tradition and history. The paper presents the data from the focus group (December 2022), other interviews (spring 2023) and archival materials (long-term research of Nina Bartošová).
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