Borders in the European Memories. A typology of remembered borders in today's Europe

Borders in the European Memories. A typology of remembered borders in today's Europe

Organizer(s)
Thomas Serrier / Mike Plitt, European University Viadrina
Location
Frankfurt an der Oder
Country
Germany
From - Until
05.03.2015 - 06.03.2015
Conf. Website
By
Aleksandra Borkowska, Berlin

An international conference was held in March 2015 at the European University in Frankfurt an der Oder with the participation of 23 scholars working on the topic of „Borders in the European Memories. A typology of remembered borders in today's Europe‟. The conference was organized by Thomas Serrier (Paris / Frankfurt an der Oder) and Mike Plitt (Frankfurt an der Oder). Alexander Wöll (Frankfurt an der Oder) opened the conference, pointing out the significance of the border topic at the European University Viadrina and the function of Frankfurt (Oder) as a bridge between Germany and Poland.

Following, THOMAS SERRIER (Paris / Frankfurt an der Oder), organizer of the conference, emphasized the deep connection between Europe, European history and the issue of borders. Due to the sheer number of former borderlines in Europe it is a huge challenge to grasp the topic of borders in the European memory.

In his keynote address, KRZYSZTOF CZYŻEWSKI (Poznań) demonstrated how memory can be a bridging border between communities using the example of the Polish-Lithuanian borderlands. He particularly emphasized that critical memory shall not only be negotiated at the level of intellectuals, but include the whole community and embrace all kinds of memories.

The first panel dealt with memories and other forms of durability. The presentation held by DIANA MISHKOVA (Sofia) gave an insight into historical conceptualizations of European regions and boundaries that emerged during key periods of the 19th and 20th century and proposed a reflexion on their impact in the longue durée.

Afterwards, BÉATRICE VON HIRSCHHAUSEN (Paris) questioned whether geographic spaces have a memory. The 2010 voting map of the Polish presidential elections clearly exemplifies how former borders still have a big impact on today's society. It has clear boundaries that line up perfectly with the former partitions of Poland. Thus, maps shall be treated as palimpsests that are several times rewritten and conserve traces of former borderlines over hundreds of years.

ETIENNE FRANÇOIS (Berlin) discussed the impact of the reformation on German society and culture from the perspective of longue durée. The creation of a new kind of confessional border in the 16th century shaped architecture, monument landscapes, and family traditions. Manifestations, as for instance in the inner decorations of churches are still visible. The durability of the borderline is attributed to its direct impact of individual and group identities.

The second panel was devoted to two of the most emblematic borders in Europe: The Rhine and the Iron Curtain. SAGI SCHAEFER (Tel Aviv) demonstrated that the bordering process in divided Germany was longer, more gradual, and involved a more diverse set of agents than usually portrayed. These lingering disparities between history and accepted notions of inter-German bordering can be explained by the superpower centered framework of Cold War studies, the dominance of Berlin in the study of German division as well as the predominant ascription of the agency and responsibility for the process of division to the GDR and the Soviet Union.

MARION DETJEN (Potsdam) presented her depiction of how Marxist-Leninist historical thinking remembered the Berlin Wall after 1991. By interviewing former GDR-historians and analysing their publications, internal papers, protocols as well as diaries, she came to the conclusion that those historians contributed to the collapse of the discourse and of the GDR from their own Marxist-Leninist premises. Although these reform communists did not participate in the civil rights movement of the peaceful revolution, they also had to abandon the teleological ideology and the belief in the infallibility of the party and took part in the disempowering of the leadership.

The following presentation by MANFRED WICHMANN (Berlin) discussed the transformation of the Berlin Wall from an Icon of the Cold War to a symbol of freedom. He pointed at two contrasting tendencies in memory culture: The fast demolition of the Wall and the disappearance of its remains in 1989 on the one hand and the establishment of a vivid memorial landscape during the past 10 years on the other hand.

BIRTE WASSENBERG (Strasbourg) studied the Rhine as a border of peace by presenting the memories of key players in the Upper Rhine Region. The goal of the third panel was to discuss the topic of borders and memories on the level of culture and civic society as well as to present innovative projects dealing with borders and memories. SIMON BRUNEL (Berlin) showed how the border topic can be approached by cinematographic and documentary means. STEPHAN FELSBERG (Frankfurt an der Oder) gave an insight into the projects of the Institute for Applied History, a Frankfurt (Oder)-based association which acts as a mediator between academia and civil society. Both lectures raised the question how the cooperation between cultural and civil society initiatives and scientific institutions can be stimulated in order to create a productive exchange.

The second conference day was opened with a panel devoted to the construction of transnational remembrance. DRAGO ROKSANDIĆ (Zagreb) studied the Adriatic „Triplex Confinium“ as a European lieu de mémoire, underlining the theoretical challenges of an analysis of collective memories at the crossroad of three imperial histories: Venice, the Habsburgs and the Ottomans.

NENAD STEFANOV (Berlin) spoke about the remembrance of political violence in the Yugoslav-Bulgarian border region between 1920 and 1956. Using personal letters as sources, he examined how individuals processed their lived experience of violence. It became clear that the border between Bulgaria and Yugoslavia drawn after the First World War was not hermetically sealed, but rather opened new realms of possibilities.

ONDŘEJ MATĚJKA (Prague) analysed the post-war developments in the Czech border region Sudetenland. After the German population had been expelled in the course of the Second World War a new society had to be built up from scratch. The remaining German cultural capital has often been neglected by the local communities. This process becomes especially clear when comparing photos from the pre-war period to those from the present. However, during the past years a positive development can be observed: Local actors take great efforts to restore abandoned houses, destroyed churches, and long forgotten monuments and thus incorporate the German heritage into Czech society.

The following presentation by NICOLAS OFFENSTADT (Paris) approached the western frontline of the First World War as a border and as a subject of memorialization and musealization. The front became a subject of interest for war tourism already during the war. After the war, traces of battle were preserved in order to reinforce the national discourse against the enemy. Post-war battlefield tourism served veterans as a way to both re-experience and denounce the war. The fact that even events of reconciliation between German and French soldiers took place at the former frontline shows how a space formerly loaded with connotations of hate and violence was transformed to a place of European peacemaking and reconstruction.

The fifth and last part of the conference was an exploratory panel dedicated to borders in the global dimensions of European memories. CAROLIN LEUTLOFF-GRANDITS (Graz) gave an example for competing border narratives in post-conflict regions. Her study revealed the highly emotional dynamics of possession and repossession in the region of Knin, Croatia, where unlike the previously discussed cases of forced migration, a part of the Serbian expellees has returned to reclaim their ownership. By claiming the space and commemorating it, the returnees challenge the current borders and exert influence on the space.

LUISA PASSERINI (Torino / Florence) presented her current Oral and Visual Memory project which deals with intercultural connections and processes of identity formation in contemporary Europe. The study aims at understanding new forms of European identity as they develop in an increasingly diasporic world by means of Oral and Visual History. Using maps drawn by illegal immigrants living in Turin that show their individual migration histories (through the Mediterranean Sea or Southeastern Europe), Passerini illustrated the liquid character of borders and the changing representations of European geography.

The conference illustrated clearly that Europe is indeed a continent of a thousand borders. It brought together renowned experts of European memory culture and introduced different methodologies and perspectives to the study of „borders as places of memory‟ as well as “the border as a European site of memory”. In addition, the exchange between international scholars and local actors from culture and civic society lead to an interesting debate which revealed that the cooperation between science and civic society leaves room for improvement.

Conference overview:

Alexander Wöll (Frankfurt an der Oder), Welcome

Thomas Serrier (Paris / Frankfurt an der Oder), Introduction

Keynote:
Krzysztof Czyżewski (Poznań), Memory Bridging Border – Critical, Common, Good

Panel I: Memories and other forms of durability

Diana Mishkova (Sofia), Historical conceptualizations of European regions and boundaries.

Béatrice von Hirschhausen (Paris), Phantom borders in Europe or Has a space a memory? Revisiting an old question.

Etienne François (Berlin), Religious borders in Europe: “Prisons of longue durée” or permanent reconstructions from below?

Chair: Claudia Weber (Frankfurt an der Oder)

Panel II: The Rhine and the Iron Curtain: two emblematic borders

Sagi Schaefer (Tel Aviv), States of Division in Germany and the Problem of Duration.

Marion Detjen (Potsdam), The Wall in the Marxist-Leninist historiography after 1989/1990.

Manfred Wichmann (Berlin), The Berlin Wall remembered. From an Icon of the Cold War to a Symbol of Freedom.

Birte Wassenberg (Strasbourg), The Rhine, a border of peace. Memories from key players in the Upper Rhine Region.

Chair: Catherine Gousseff (Paris)

Panel III: Border experts in the areas of culture and civic society: Atelier Limo and the Institute for Applied History

Simon Brunel (Berlin)

Stephan Felsberg (Frankfurt an der Oder)

Chair: Mike Plitt (Frankfurt an der Oder)

Panel IV: Across borders: The making of transnational remembrance cultures

Drago Roksandic (Zagreb), The Adriatic „Triplex Confinium“ as a European lieu de mémoire

Nenad Stefanov (Berlin), Serbian-Bulgarian Border 1920-1950-Traumatic memory, media and publicity

Ondřej Matějka (Prague), Sudetenland or The function of a borderland from bulwark to junction.

Nicolas Offenstadt (Paris), Memorialization/musealization of former frontlines: The Western Front 1914-2014.

Chair: Werner Benecke (Frankfurt an der Oder)

Panel V: Borders in the global dimensions of European memories

Carolin Leutloff-Grandits (Graz), Contested border narratives in present day Knin, Croatia: local, national and European dimensions.

Luisa Passerini (Torino / Florence), Borders With/in Europe: Oral and visual memories.

Chair: Klaus Weber (Frankfurt an der Oder)


Editors Information
Published on
03.08.2015
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English
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