36 research outputs found

    Alltagsgeschichten (some histories of everyday life) / «quelques histoires de tous les jours»

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    Catalogue to accompany an installation by Ingelevics, based on his family’s experiences living in displaced persons camps throughout Germany after leaving Latvia in 1944. Introductory texts by M. Hanna and G. Hall draw attention to the artist’s interest in the relationship between documentary photography and the museum. Differences between living memory and historical representation are discussed, especially in terms of how they relate to the construction of identity. Eksteins provides an historical context for the artist’s work by describing the devastating effects of World War II. Fitzpatrick suggests Ingelevics’ photographs of “memory sites” (former displaced persons’ camps) question the signifying structure of the archive by countering historical narratives with a “living memory.” Notions of history and truth are considered in relation to the value of personal memory as subject for representation. Includes brief texts by Ingelevics as well as excerpts from his interviews with family members. Texts in English and French. Biographical notes. 23 bibl. ref

    Chapter 11. The Cultural Legacy of the Great War

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    <i>A Companion to Europe 1900–1945</i> (review)

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    History or Histrionics? Recent Writing on the Great War

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    <i>Alfred Valdmanis and the Politics of Survival</i>, by Gerhard P. Bassler

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    <i>Reconstructing the Subject: Modernist Painting in Western Germany, 1945-1950</i>, by Yule F. Heibel

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