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Wstęp
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| 2. |
Giving Space to the Tabooed Trauma: Sofia Taikon’s Testimony in Katitzi Z-1234 and Sofia Z-4515
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| 3. |
Changing Narratives of Jan and Maria Malisz’s Case (1933): Social, Legal and Cultural Perspectives
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Menachem Kaiser’s Quest for Family Heirloom and the Aftermath of Historical Trauma
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| 5. |
Industrial Spaces That Won’t Go Away
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| 6. |
The Dybbuk Speaks with the Mouth of the Living: Wartime Trauma and Strategies of Holocaust Remembrance in Hungarian Literature Between 1949 and 1953
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| 7. |
In the Space of Cumulative Trauma: Lessons from a Hungarian Trauma-Novel in Vojvodina
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| 8. |
Post-Holocaust Migrations of Empathy: My Star by Felicja Raszkin-Nowak
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| 9. |
Dead Rescuers: The Commemoration of Poles Who Lost Their Lives Saving Jews During the Second World War
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| 10. |
The Vistula, Overgrown Shrubs, and Untended Gardens in the Literature of Postwar, Communist Warsaw
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| 11. |
Representing the Ukrainian Migration Experience: From a Cultural Monologue Towards Interculturality
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| 12. |
Stabat Mater: The Impossible Mourning in Teresa Ferenc’s Poetry
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| 13. |
The Scars of Memory: The Biographies of Monument Trees in Central Europe
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| 14. |
Neglected Trauma: The Lives of Women Dissidents and Émigrés in Daňa Horáková’s Memoirs
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| 15. |
Różewicz (zre)konstruowany?
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| 16. |
Ecologizing Memory
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| 17. |
Transgression and Tenderness. Olga Tokarczuk in Comparative Perspective
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| 18. |
E.T.A. Hoffmann in Warsaw. The New Book by Peter Lachmann
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