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  • Studies in Contemporary History

    Reconsidering the Cold War historiography’s focus on high politics, conflict and confrontation, this series encourages the development of new research that explores ties and similarities transcending the political divide in Europe. It also welcomes new approaches to the history of Central and East European societies under dictatorships: approaches which shed light on individual and collective agency and show high politics as only one of several factors of change. Research in contemporary history still often mentally maps Europe as divided into a West and an East. This overemphasizes barriers between people who often shared similar values and tastes, practices and technologies, between interrelated social phenomena or just neighboring regions. In a similar way, narratives of Central and Eastern Europe often tend to reflect a simplistic vision centered on the conflict between the “regime” and “society”. This overemphasizes the role of crude domination and hinders understanding of the reproduction, evolution and normalization of European communist regimes up to 1989. We seek contributions that employ approaches from history, especially those which integrate insights gained from neighboring disciplines, such as sociology, anthropology, political science, or cultural and gender studies. Discussions of comparative and transnational perspectives are particularly welcome. The series was formerly known as Warsaw Studies in Contemporary History .

    10 publications

  • Warsaw Studies in Contemporary History

    Reconsidering the Cold War historiography’s focus on high politics, conflict and confrontation, this series encourages the development of new research that explores ties and similarities transcending the political divide in Europe. It also welcomes new approaches to the history of Central and East European societies under dictatorships: approaches which shed light on individual and collective agency and show high politics as only one of several factors of change. Research in contemporary history still often mentally maps Europe as divided into a West and an East. This overemphasizes barriers between people who often shared similar values and tastes, practices and technologies, between interrelated social phenomena or just neighboring regions. In a similar way, narratives of Central and Eastern Europe often tend to reflect a simplistic vision centered on the conflict between the “regime” and “society”. This overemphasizes the role of crude domination and hinders understanding of the reproduction, evolution and normalization of European communist regimes up to 1989. We seek contributions that employ approaches from history, especially those which integrate insights gained from neighboring disciplines, such as sociology, anthropology, political science, or cultural and gender studies. Discussions of comparative and transnational perspectives are particularly welcome. From Vol. 4 onwards, the series continues as Studies in Contemporary History . Reconsidering the Cold War historiography’s focus on high politics, conflict and confrontation, this series encourages the development of new research that explores ties and similarities transcending the political divide in Europe. It also welcomes new approaches to the history of Central and East European societies under dictatorships: approaches which shed light on individual and collective agency and show high politics as only one of several factors of change. Research in contemporary history still often mentally maps Europe as divided into a West and an East. This overemphasizes barriers between people who often shared similar values and tastes, practices and technologies, between interrelated social phenomena or just neighboring regions. In a similar way, narratives of Central and Eastern Europe often tend to reflect a simplistic vision centered on the conflict between the “regime” and “society”. This overemphasizes the role of crude domination and hinders understanding of the reproduction, evolution and normalization of European communist regimes up to 1989. We seek contributions that employ approaches from history, especially those which integrate insights gained from neighboring disciplines, such as sociology, anthropology, political science, or cultural and gender studies. Discussions of comparative and transnational perspectives are particularly welcome. From Vol. 4 onwards, the series continues as Studies in Contemporary History . Reconsidering the Cold War historiography’s focus on high politics, conflict and confrontation, this series encourages the development of new research that explores ties and similarities transcending the political divide in Europe. It also welcomes new approaches to the history of Central and East European societies under dictatorships: approaches which shed light on individual and collective agency and show high politics as only one of several factors of change. Research in contemporary history still often mentally maps Europe as divided into a West and an East. This overemphasizes barriers between people who often shared similar values and tastes, practices and technologies, between interrelated social phenomena or just neighboring regions. In a similar way, narratives of Central and Eastern Europe often tend to reflect a simplistic vision centered on the conflict between the “regime” and “society”. This overemphasizes the role of crude domination and hinders understanding of the reproduction, evolution and normalization of European communist regimes up to 1989. We seek contributions that employ approaches from history, especially those which integrate insights gained from neighboring disciplines, such as sociology, anthropology, political science, or cultural and gender studies. Discussions of comparative and transnational perspectives are particularly welcome. From Vol. 4 onwards, the series continues as Studies in Contemporary History .

    3 publications

  • Studien zu Zeitgeschichte und Sicherheitspolitik - Studies in Contemporary History and Security Policy

    ISSN: 1422-8327

    The Studies in Contemporary History and Security Policy, edited by the Center for Security Studies at the ETH Zurich (Swiss Federal Institute of Technology Zurich), address issues of domestic and international security as well as aspects of contemporary history. According to the main topics of the center's scientific and academic activities, the series focuses mainly on the following areas: Swiss foreign and security policy since World War II, international security policy and international relations, as well as conflict research. The Studies in Contemporary History and Security Policy, edited by the Center for Security Studies at the ETH Zurich (Swiss Federal Institute of Technology Zurich), address issues of domestic and international security as well as aspects of contemporary history. According to the main topics of the center's scientific and academic activities, the series focuses mainly on the following areas: Swiss foreign and security policy since World War II, international security policy and international relations, as well as conflict research. Die Studien zu Zeitgeschichte und Sicherheitspolitik, herausgegeben von der Forschungsstelle für Sicherheitspolitik der ETH Zürich, beschäftigen sich mit aktuellen Fragen nationaler und internationaler Sicherheit sowie Themen der Zeitgeschichte. Entsprechend den wissenschaftlichen Interessen der Forschungsstelle weist die Serie folgende Schwerpunkte auf: Schweizerische Aussen- und Sicherheitspolitik seit dem Zweiten Weltkrieg, internationale Sicherheitspolitik und internationale Beziehungen sowie Konfliktforschung.

    15 publications

  • Title: Welfare Policies in Switzerland and Italy

    Welfare Policies in Switzerland and Italy

    Institutions, Motherhood, Family and Work in the 19th and 20th Centuries
    by Michela Minesso (Volume editor) 2021
    ©2021 Edited Collection
  • Title: The History of Conversion and Contemporary Cults

    The History of Conversion and Contemporary Cults

    by Natalie Isser (Author) Lita Linzer Schwartz (Author)
    ©1988 Others
  • Title: Borderland Studies Meets Child Studies

    Borderland Studies Meets Child Studies

    A European Encounter
    by Machteld Venken (Volume editor) Karol Pereplys (Drawings by) 2018
    ©2017 Edited Collection
  • Title: Political Myths in History Textbooks

    Political Myths in History Textbooks

    War Images of the Falange in Spain (1939–1951) and the Polish Workers’ Party in Poland (1945–1956)
    by Maciej Chrostowski (Author) 2024
    ©2025 Monographs
  • Title: Through the Back Door

    Through the Back Door

    The Black Market in Poland 1944–1989
    by Jerzy Kochanowski (Author) 2017
    ©2017 Monographs
  • Title: Oral History and the War

    Oral History and the War

    The Nazi Concentration Camp Experience in a Biographical-Narrative Perspective
    by Piotr Filipkowski (Author) 2019
    ©2019 Monographs
  • Title: Reading Monuments

    Reading Monuments

    A Comparative Study of Monuments in Poznań and Strasbourg from the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries
    by Małgorzata Praczyk (Author) 2020
    ©2020 Monographs
  • Title: Veterans, Victims, and Memory

    Veterans, Victims, and Memory

    The Politics of the Second World War in Communist Poland
    by Joanna Wawrzyniak (Author) 2015
    ©2016 Monographs
  • Title: Remnants of Wehrmacht Soldiers

    Remnants of Wehrmacht Soldiers

    Burial and Commemoration Practices of German Soldiers of the Second World War in Russia and Europe, 1941 – 2023
    by Nina Janz (Author) 2024
    ©2024 Monographs
  • Title: Evoking Polish Memory

    Evoking Polish Memory

    State, Self and the Communist Past in Transition
    by Anna Witeska-Mlynarczyk (Author) 2014
    ©2014 Monographs
  • Title: Arrested Mourning

    Arrested Mourning

    Memory of the Nazi Camps in Poland, 1944–1950
    by Zofia Woycicka (Author) 2014
    ©2014 Monographs
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