Expanding Europe through Memory: The Shifting Content of the Ever-Salient Past

Citation:

Verovšek, Peter J. “Expanding Europe through Memory: The Shifting Content of the Ever-Salient Past.” Millennium 43, no. 2 (2015): 531-50.

Abstract:

Collective memories of war and suffering have been crucial to the development of European integration since 1945. My basic thesis is that remembrance has also played an important role in the subsequent expansions of the organization that has come to be known as the European Union (EU). As the EU expanded into new regions of Europe, particularly the postdictatorial south and the postcommunist east, continental institutions and existing member-states have been confronted by conflicting understandings of the past. Although the past has continued to push states towards membership in the EU, the nature of these remembered experiences has changed through the various rounds of expansion. In addition to tracing the role that memory has played in the widening of Europe, I argue that these confrontations have sparked important debates about the meaning of the past for Europe today.

Publisher's Version

Last updated on 07/11/2015