The Discursive Construction of History
The Discursive Construction of History
The Discursive Construction of History
How do democratic and pluralistic societies cope with traumatic events in their past? What discursive
strategies and taboos are employed in reconstructing wars, revolutions, torturing, mass killings and
genocide in a way that makes their contradiction of basic human rights and values potentially invisible?
The process of reconstructing history through narratives takes place in different domains of life and in a
range of genres. Such narratives are frequently reproduced through political speeches, films,
documentaries and schoolbooks. Moreover, they are also transmitted in the private spheres of families
and across generations. This interdisciplinary volume analyzes in detail, for the first time, the traditional
image(s) of the German Wehrmacht since 1945 and the debates in Austria and Germany surrounding
two exhibitions about the war crimes of the Wehrmacht during World War II - exhibitions which have
to be regarded as a major intervention in national historical narrative and 'myths' and which caused a
huge range of political and media reactions, from scandals to critical reflection.
HANNES HEER works in Hamburg, Germany as a writer and exhibition organizer. From 1993 to 2000 he
worked at the Hamburg Institute for Social Research, directing the first Wehrmacht exhibition. He has
written numerous books on National Socialism, the Wehrmacht and post-war recollection.
WALTER MANOSCHEK is Professor of Political Science and chairs the Department for Government at
the University of Vienna, Austria. His research and publications focus on politics of the past, the
political system of National Socialism, and Holocaust Studies.
ALEXANDER POLLAK is Research Manager at the European Monitoring Centre on Racism and
Xenophobia and an external lecturer in the Department of Government at the University of Vienna,
Austria. He has written extensively on the politics of memory, racism, anti-semitism and critical
discourse analysis.
RUTH WODAK is Distinguished Professor of Discourse Studies, Lancaster University, UK, and was
previously Professor of Applied Linguistics in the University of Vienna. She held multiple visiting
professorships (Stanford, Georgetown, Minneapolis, Uppsala, UEA) and in 2008-9 will hold the Kerstin
Hesselgren Chair of the Swedish Parliament . She is co-editor of the Journal of Language and Politics and
Critical Discourse Studies and has many book publications in the areas of Critical Discourse Analysis,
Racism, Anti-Semitism, Identity Politics, and the Politics of the Past.
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