Negotiating Identity and Collective Memory in Czech Silesia - Memory, Heritage and Public History in Central and Eastern Europe - CEU Press

Negotiating Identity and Collective Memory in Czech Silesia

Negotiating Identity and Collective Memory in Czech Silesia - Memory, Heritage and Public History in Central and Eastern Europe - CEU Press

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Published: 26 January, 2026
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Description

How do people negotiate identity, memory, and history in Czech Silesia? How do they make sense of a turbulent past marked by mass displacement, shifting borders, and successive political regimes? And what do dominant narratives of Czech nationalism mean for communities living with the absence of others?

This rich ethnography of the city of Opava and the neighbouring Hlučín region follows a diverse cast of local actors involved in shaping and remaking regional collective memory. From the bottom up, the book examines how memory is selectively preserved, silenced, or commodified in response to different mnemonic challenges, including contested Wehrmacht legacies, linguistic politics, and the branding of Silesian cuisine.

Foregrounding both vernacular and institutional actors, the ethnography shows how identity in this Central European borderland is continually reconstructed and negotiated. Going beyond post-socialism as an explanatory frame, the book makes a strong case for a more ambitious and holistic approach to studying collective memory and the ways it shapes belonging in post-imperial, post-socialist Europe.

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More Details

Type Book
ISBN13 9789633867907
ISBN10 9633867908
Number Of Pages 216
Item Weight 560 g
Publisher / Reseller Central European University Press
Format hardback
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Author's Bio

Johana Wyss is a social anthropologist and tenured researcher at the Czech Academy of Sciences. She examines memory politics, identity, political polarisation, and ethno-national formation in Central and Eastern Europe. Her work explores how post-imperial legacies and contested borderland histories shape collective memory and contemporary identity narratives.

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