Jahrbuch für Europäische Geschichte 19 (2018)

Titel der Ausgabe 
Jahrbuch für Europäische Geschichte 19 (2018)
Weiterer Titel 
Victimhood and Acknowledgement. The Other Side of Terrorism

Erschienen
München 2018: Oldenbourg Verlag
Erscheint 
jährlich
ISBN
978-3-11-057844-7
Anzahl Seiten
172 S.
Preis
49,95EUR

 

Kontakt

Institution
Jahrbuch für Europäische Geschichte
Land
Deutschland
c/o
Prof. Dr. Johannes Paulmann Leibniz-Institut für Europäische Geschichte Mainz Alte Universitätsstraße 19 55116 Mainz E-Mail: <paulmann@ieg-mainz.de>
Von
Rittgerodt, Rabea

The history of terrorism has been largely a history of perpetrators, their motives and actions. The history of their victims has always seemed to be of secondary importance. But terrorism is communication by violence, and its efficiency depends significantly on the selection and the treatment of the victims by the perpetrators, on the one hand, and the perception and acknowledgement of victimhood by the public, on the other. How does it affect our picture of the history of terrorism then, if the victims are moved centre stage? If the focus is put on their suffering, their agency, their helplessness, or on how they are acknowledged or exploited by society, politics and media? If the central role is taken into account which they play in terrorist propaganda as well as in the emotional response of the public? The contributions to this edition of the European History Yearbook will examine such questions in a broad range of historical case studies and methods, including visual history. Not least, they aim at historicizing the roles of survivors and relatives in the social process of coming to terms with terrorist violence, a question highly relevant up to the present day.

Inhaltsverzeichnis

Content

Petra Terhoeven
Victimhood and Acknowledgement: The Other Side of Terrorism

Anke Hilbrenner
Of Heroes and Villains – The Making of Terrorist Victims as Historical Perpetrators in Pre-Revolutionary Russia

Marie Breen-Smyth
Suffering, Victims and Survivors in the Northern Ireland Conflict: Definitions, Policies, and Politics.

Anna Cento Bull
Reconciliation through Agonistic Engagement? Victims and Former Perpetrators in Dialogue in Italy Several Decades after Terrorism

Florian Jessensky and Martin Rupps
“May the burden of your ordeal gradually fade from memory”:
Dealings with Former Hostages of the Hijacked Lufthansa Aircraft ‘Landshut’

Charlotte Klonk
In Whose Name? Visualising Victims of Terror

Petra Terhoeven
Conclusions

Forum

Gregor Feindt
Making and Unmaking Socialist Modernities: Seven Interventions into the Writing of Contemporary History on Central and Eastern Europe

Tillmann Lohse
A Collapsing Migratory Regime? The Map of the Migration Period and its Iconology at the Beginning of the 21st Century

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