Roundtable
Confronting the Past: The Role of the European Historian TodayEmile Chabal, Eirini Karamouzipp 1–2
The (Re-)construction of Monuments in Germany: New Historical Narratives in a Time of Nation-buildingSandrine Kott, Thomas Wiederpp 3–8
Contemporary History as an Intrusion into Personal Memory: Methodological Dilemmas, Public Presence and the Perils of PresentismEvanthis Hatzivassilioupp 9–14
When History Matters Too Much: Historians and the Politics of History in PolandPaweł Machcewiczp. 15–20
Historians and the Decade of Centenaries in Modern IrelandCaoimhe Nic Dháibhéidpp 21–26
Irrelevant Scapegoat: The Perils of Doing European History in Post-Trump AmericaDominique Kirchner Reillpp 27–32
Scholars and the Politics of International Art RestitutionJelena Suboticpp 33–37
The Political Role of the HistorianDavid Motadelpp 38–45
The Memory of Southern European Dictatorships in Popular TV ShowsKostis Kornetispp 46–51
The Adventures of an Oral History Archive in the Greek Public DomainGeorgios Antonioupp 52–56
Putin's HistoriesSergey Radchenkopp 57–60
Article
The Lives and Afterlives of a Soviet Misfit: Volodymyr Ivasiuk, the Emotional Crisis of Late Socialism and the Anti-Soviet Turn in Ukrainian Popular CultureZbigniew Wojnowskipp 61–78
Police vs. Party? Institutional Hierarchies and Agency in Soviet Moldavia, 1944–1952Igor Cașupp 79–96
Europe in the Mirror of Russia: How Interwar Travels to the Soviet Union Reshaped European Perceptions of Borders, Time and HistoryJessica Wardhaughpp 97–113
A Threat to National Security? The Legal Dispute between ‘Red Rudi’ and the British Home Office, 1970–1971Katharina Karcherpp 114–130
Catalans and Rifis during the Wilsonian Moment: The Quest for Self-Determination in the Post-Versailles WorldPol Dalmaupp 131–145
Review article
Resistance in Postwar France: Five New and Noteworthy HistoriesAlice L. Conklinpp 146–156
Writing the History of Postwar European DemocracyPhilipp Nielsenpp 157–167
Notes on Contributorspp 168–171