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Multiple dimensions and discursive contests in Austria's Mythscape

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posted on 2024-02-12, 10:08 authored by Christian Karner
<p>This chapter presents a brief theoretical outline and contextualization in Austria's postwar history. It reveals several dimensions that structure, or divide, the country's mythscape: top-down and bottom-up historical analogies; invocations—for very different purposes—of World War II by far-right extremists and some on or near the political left respectively; transnational debates with Austrian contributors or audiences. Returning to the prom controversy, the chapter then formulates analytical key-questions to be put to contemporary, analogical invocations of the history of World War II. The country-specific relevance of World War II to national debates and self-understandings is also invoked in a recent collection of reflections by Germans living in Austria. The context to top-down and bottom-up invocations of the same historical reference, albeit for mutually opposed purposes, was the Euro-debt-crisis. There are prominent external voices commenting— from the outside in—on some contemporary analogies drawn within Austria's mythscape.</p>

History

School affiliated with

  • School of Social and Political Sciences (Research Outputs)

Publication Title

The Use and Abuse of Memory: Interpreting World War II in Contemporary European Politics

Pages/Article Number

193-210

Publisher

Taylor & Francis

ISBN

9781351296564

Date Submitted

2020-01-17

Date Accepted

2017-01-01

Date of First Publication

2017-01-01

Date of Final Publication

2017-01-01

ePrints ID

39520

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