Lviv - Wrocław, Cities in Parallel Myth, Memory and Migration, c. 1890-Present
Jan Fellerer, "Lviv - Wrocław, Cities in Parallel?: Myth, Memory and Migration, c. 1890-Present"
English | ISBN: 9633863236 | 2020 | 364 pages | PDF | 5 MB
After World War II, Europe witnessed the massive redrawing of national borders and the efforts to make the population fit those new borders. As a consequence of these forced changes, both Lviv and Wrocław went through cataclysmic changes in population and culture. Assertively Polish prewar Lwów became Soviet Lvov, and then, after 1991, it became assertively Ukrainian Lviv. Breslau, the third largest city in Germany before 1945, was in turn "recovered" by communist Poland as Wrocław. Practically the entire population of Breslau was replaced, and Lwów's demography too was dramatically restructured: many Polish inhabitants migrated to Wrocław and most Jews perished or went into exile. The forced migration of these groups incorporated new myths and the construction of official memory projects.


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