Memory on Wars Between Russia and Central and Eastern Europe

Monday

Part 1: Introduction and Theoretical Fundamentals:  Constructivism and Identity

**Ted Hopf (1998), “The Promise of Constructivism in International Relations Theory,” International Security, 23(1) (Summer): 171-200.

**Brent J. Steele (2008), Ontological Security in International Relations:  Self-Identity and the IR State. New York: London:  ch. 3, pp. 49-75.

Chyba: Odkazovaný objekt neexistuje nebo nemáte právo jej číst.
https://is.muni.cz/el/fss/jaro2024/IREn5025/um/Ontological_Security.pdf

Part 2: Memory and National Identity

**Aleida Assmann(2006), “Memory, Individual and Collective” in Robert E. Goodin and Charles Tilly, eds., The Oxford Handbook of Contextual Analysis, Oxford:  Oxford University Press.  

**Olga Malinova (2021). "Politics of Memory and Nationalism,  Nationalities Papers. 49:6, 997-1007.

OPTIONAL:  Felix Berenskoetter (2014), “Parameters of a National Biography,”  European Journal of International Relations, 20(1): 262-288.

Chyba: Odkazovaný objekt neexistuje nebo nemáte právo jej číst.
https://is.muni.cz/el/fss/jaro2024/IREn5025/um/Assman_Memory_Individual_and_Collective.pdf


Part 3:  The Politics of Memory


**Jan Kubik and Michael Bernhard (2014), "A Theory of the Politics of Memory," in Bernhard and Kubik, eds., Twenty Years after Communism:  The Politics of Memory and Commemoration, Oxford:  Oxford  University Press, 3-37.

Chyba: Odkazovaný objekt neexistuje nebo nemáte právo jej číst.
https://is.muni.cz/el/fss/jaro2024/IREn5025/um/Bernhard_and_Kubik__Twenty_years_after_Communism__1_.pdf