Echoes of the Past
Carinthian Slovene Memories of the Second World War
Douglas Carlton McKnight author
Format:Hardback
Publisher:University of Toronto Press
Published:13th Jan '26
£56.00
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Echoes of the Past delves into the collective remembrance practices of the Carinthian Slovene community since the end of the Second World War, offering a nuanced analysis of museums, memorials, civic institutions, and literature created by Carinthian Slovene artists and activists.
Douglas Carlton McKnight draws on methods from critical geography, memory studies, literature, and museum studies to provide an interdisciplinary investigation of how this ethnic minority remembers and commemorates the war. Challenging prevailing theories that emphasize the transnational flow of Second World War memories, McKnight demonstrates that Carinthian Slovene recollections remain deeply rooted in local geography and community experience. Through this innovative case study, Echoes of the Past not only broadens our understanding of European memory cultures but also highlights the enduring significance of place in shaping collective memory.
By foregrounding the local dimensions of remembrance, this book offers a fresh perspective for scholars and readers interested in memory studies, minority studies, postwar European history, and literature. Echoes of the Past ultimately invites us to reconsider how stories of the past are preserved, experienced, and reinterpreted within specific communities, pointing to new directions for future research.
“Masterfully interpreting various media of communication such as memorials, interviews, and novels, Douglas Carlton McKnight's Echoes of the Past is a needed contribution to memory studies. The author's close reading reveals how this oft-overlooked minority group's vernacular memory interacts with larger, official, and, at times, hostile memory discourses at the state, national, and transnational levels.” -- Eric A. Langenbacher, Teaching Professor of Government, Georgetown University
“This book is a sensitive account of the split between official memory in the Austrian state of Carinthia and the silenced memory of the partisan war fought there against Nazi Germany. Too close to Yugoslav communists for Austrian nationalists, the Carinthian Slovene resistance has long been relegated to the margins of collective memory. McKnight shows how memory activists, including novelists, have helped create a new memory culture for the new Europe.” -- Jay Winter, Charles J. Stille Professor Emeritus of History, Yale University
ISBN: 9781487565046
Dimensions: 235mm x 159mm x 18mm
Weight: 440g
226 pages