This is a head work page, grouping together all editions of this title listed on the site. Browse through ‘All Editions’, Rights information, and Permissions information, to find a rights contact, or a particular edition.

Regional & national history

Contemporary Identity and Memory in the Borderlands of Poland and Germany - Head Work

by Author(s): Aleksandra Binicewicz

Description

The book analyses issues associated with the contemporary and memory in the Polish-German borderlands – a complex, multidimensional cultural and geographic area. The first section of the book, which focuses on contemporary issues, is divided into three parts: namely, a theoretical body, records of conversations with the inhabitants of the borderlands who are engaged in social activities, and records of workshops and conversations that brought together teenage inhabitants of the borderlands. Close cooperation with the inhabitants of two borderland towns resulted in several interesting perspectives on the borderlands, which are seen as a physical space, as well as a mental, intimate, close, and sometimes frustrating space subject to micro- and macro-scale transformations. In this book, the borderlands are viewed from these two perspectives. The micro-scale, is marked out by the individual experience of the inhabitants of the borderlands, and the macro-scale by the institutional framework established for the purpose of constructing an integrated community on the border.

Contemporary Identity and Memory in the Borderlands of Poland and Germany

All Editions

Author Biography

Aleksandra Marta Binicewicz is a PhD student in the Institute of Cultural Studies at the Faculty of Social Sciences of Adam Mickiewicz University in Poznan, Poland, having received an MA in Cultural Studies from the same university. From 2013 to 2017, she was a head of a research grant “The Hybrid Culture. The Contemporary in the Borderlands of Poland and Germany” founded by the Ministry of Science and Higher Education in a Diamond Grant (Diamentowy Grant) programme. Her research interests include collective memory, identity, and cultural history, as well as notions of cultural privacy in the age of new media.

Rights Information

All Rights Available

Subscribe to our

newsletter