Preface
Tucker: Historiographic Revision and Revisionism: The Evidential Difference;
Petrovic: From Revisionism to “Revisionism”: Legal Limits to Historical Interpretation;
Hahn : The Holocaustizing of the Transfer-Discourse: Historical Revisionism or Old Wine in New Bottles?;
Loose : The Anti-Fascist Myth of the German Democratic Republic and Its Decline after 1989; Kopecek: In Search of “National Memory”: Politics of History, Nostalgia and the Historiography of Communism in the Czech Republic and East Central Europe;
Kocourek: White Spaces are also Grey Spaces in Historical Revisionism: The Czech Right, 1939-1948 and the Battle against the Beneš Doctrine in Czech Historiography;
Johnson: Begetting & Remembering: Creating a Slovak Collective Memory in the Post-Communist World;
Laczó: The Many Moralists and the Few Communists. Approaching Morality and Politics in post-Communist Hungary;
Mink: The Revisions of the 1956 Hungarian revolution;
Stobiecki: Historians Facing Politics of History. The Case of Poland;
Kasianov: Revisiting the Great Famine of 1932-1933: Politics of Memory and Public Consciousness (Ukraine after 1991);
Wulf: The Struggle for Official Recognition of ‘Displaced’ Group Memories in Post-Soviet Estonia,
About the Authors
Index