Despite considerable evidence of the link between generational cohorts and mnemonic persistence
in other social and historical contexts, existing research on memory in former state socialist
countries tends to focus primarily on evidence of mnemonic change. In contrast, this article
seeks to develop a more nuanced understanding of post-state-socialist memories, one capable of
accounting for both mnemonic change and persistence. Methodologically, the article combines the
analysis of personal memories across several generations with a reconstruction of the changing
contours of everyday life in different historical periods, based on archival and secondary sources.
To demonstrate the usefulness of such an approach, the article examines the memories of life at
the Yugoslav border with Italy, as recounted by the inhabitants of the Slovenian border town of
Nova Gorica in 2008.
History
Published in
CONTEMPORARY EUROPEAN HISTORY
Volume
23
Issue
3
Pages
447 - 468 (22)
Citation
MIHELJ, S., 2014. The persistence of the past: memory, generational cohorts and the 'Iron Curtain'. Contemporary European History, 23 (3), pp.447-468.