Conference Papers
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Panel 1: National Identities
Heidi Hein-Kircher, Herder Institute, Marburg, Germany, From the People’s Republic to Third Republic: Remembrance and New Identity?
Wanda Jarząbek, Polish Academy of Sciences, Warsaw, Poland, Shadows of Memory and the German Question in Polish Politics 1989–2006
Michael Meng, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, Whose Victims? Remembering the Warsaw (Ghetto) Uprising, 1945–1968
Panel 2: Representing Memory
Przemysław Czapliński, The Adam Mickiewicz University, Poznań, Poland, Declaring a War: Contemporary Polish Prose Fiction and the Memory of WWII
Marek Zaleski, Institute for Literary Studies (IBL), Warsaw, Poland, Liberation of Memory? Post-Memory or Camp-Memory? On What Is a Messenger Girl Doing? by Darek Foks and Zbigniew Libera
Bożena Karwowska, University of British Columbia, Canada, German Female Characters in Polish Postwar Literature: Antagonistic (National) Identities and “Female” Memories
Panel 3: Flight and Expulsions
Paweł Lutomski, Stanford University, Who Are the Victims and Who Are the Perpetrators? Polish Expulsions of Germans as a Case of Moral Ambiguity
Christian Lotz, The Leipziger Circle: Forum for Scholarship and the Arts, Germany, Expulsion and the Politics of Memory
Magdalena Marszałek, Humboldt University, Berlin, Germany, Memories on Stage: The Theater Project “Transfer” by Jan Klata
Panel 4: Reconciliation and the Other
Annika Frieberg, University of North Carolina Chapel Hill, Reconciliation Remembered: Early Activists in the Polish–German Relations
Piotr Kosicki, Princeton University, Polish Catholics’ Path to Germany: Historical Memory, Transnational Intellectual Networks, and the Polish Bishops’ Letter of 1965
Stefan Guth, University of Bern, Switzerland, Friendship by Decree: The Commission of Historians of the German Democratic Republic and the People’s Republic of Poland 1956–1990
David Pickus, Arizona State University, Not Another Other: Re-Thinking the German Image of Poland
Panel 5: Strategizing Memory
Hanna Gosk, Warsaw University, Poland, Aspects of Identity-Formation in the Dialogue with the Other: A Literary Version of Polish–German Relations in 20th-Century Polish Fiction
Jessie Labov, Stanford University, Nothing to Fear but Gross Himself
Joanna Kędzierska Stimmel, Middlebury College, One Past, Two Histories: Tracing/Inventing the Holocaust Past in Texts by Monika Maron and Jarosław M. Rymkiewicz
Panel 6: Tourism’s Memory
Erica Lehrer, University of Washington, Of Mice, Cats, and Pigs: Postmemorial Relations in the Jewish–German–Polish Troika
Imke Hansen, University of Hamburg, Germany, Who Owns Auschwitz? Conflicting Memories and the Instrumentalisation of the Holocaust: German, Jewish, and Polish Perspectives
Bryoni Trezise, University of New South Wales, Sydney, Australia, Postcards from Auschwitz: Tourism’s Memory
Panel 7: Local Identities
Anna Muller, Indiana University, To Become a “Gdańszczanin”—The Process of Constructing Post-War Polish Gdańsk through the Prism of Oral History and Memory Studies
Gregor Thum, University of Pittsburgh, The Rediscovery of Prussia: Searching for the Local Past in Poland and Germany
Winson Chu, University of California, Berkeley, The Lodzer Mensch: From Cultural Contamination to Marketable Multiculturalism
Panel 8: Spatial Narratives
Aleksandra Galasińska, University of Wolverhampton, Great Britain, Once upon a Time on the River Neisse: Temporal Indexicality in Photo-Elicited Narratives from a Polish Border Town
Andrew Asher, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, In the Absence of History: Inventing Transnational Space in the Border Cities of Frankfurt (Oder), Germany and Słubice, Poland
Marta Kurkowska-Budzan, Jagiellonian University, Cracow, Poland, WWII and Germans in Past and Present Polish Landscape of Memory. Jedwabne and Wizna: A Case Study
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