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From: H-Net Staff <[email protected]>
Date: Wed, Jul 25, 2018 at 7:44 AM
Subject: H-Net Review [H-Socialisms]: Ghodsee on Mrozik and Holubec,
'Historical Memory of Central and East European Communism'
To: <[email protected]>


Agnieszka Mrozik, Stanislav Holubec, eds.  Historical Memory of
Central and East European Communism.  Routledge Studies in Cultural
History Series. New York  Routledge, 2018.  294 pp.  $149.95 (cloth),
ISBN 978-1-138-54226-6; $49.95 (e-book), ISBN 978-1-351-00928-7.

Reviewed by Kristen Ghodsee (University of Pennsylvania)
Published on H-Socialisms (July, 2018)
Commissioned by Gary Roth

Historical Memory and Communism

Back in the fall of 2014, I visited the House of Terror museum in
Budapest. On the way out, I flipped through the pages of the guest
book, curious to read the reactions of other visitors after they had
perused the exhibits. One comment in particular caught my eye because
it took up an entire page. A Chilean man used the book to express his
deep gratitude to Augusto Pinochet for saving Chile from the supposed
horrors of socialism with his September 11, 1973, coup d'état
against the democratically elected president Salvador Allende. The
high crimes and human rights abuses of General Pinochet--the brutal,
US-backed dictator--were apparently excused by his stalwart
anti-communism.

Although he died in 2006, Pinochet has experienced a recent revival
among the denizens of the American alt-right. Memes and T-shirts
featuring "Pinochet's Free Helicopter Tours" or "Free Helicopter
Rides" refer to the extrajudicial killings of leftists in Argentina
and Chile in the 1970s wherein dictators flew their political
opponents over rivers or oceans and pushed them out.[1] To the young
men of the alt-right, posting images or GIFS of Pinochet and
helicopters on Twitter, Reddit, and 4chan is their preferred way of
threatening those they perceive as a danger to their "God given
rights."[2] In the ongoing global battle for the historical memory of
the Cold War, Pinochet lives on as a heroic defender of capitalism,
and the continued demonization of twentieth-century East European
communism aids in his beatification.

Agnieszka Mrozik and Stanislav Holubec's excellent edited volume,
_Historical Memory of Central and East European Communism_, is a
wonderful addition to the growing scholarship about how this past is
being constructed and reconstructed in the era after the global
financial crisis and the Great Recession. The book is divided into
three parts. The first, "Memory of the Left in Post-socialist
Europe," consists of three superb chapters by Csilla Kiss, Thorsten
Holzhauser and Antony Kalashnikov, and Walter Baier, which examine
the landscape of contemporary leftist parties and how they have dealt
with the collapse of communism since 1989. Kiss's chapter deals with
the failure of the Hungarian Left to create a narrative that counters
the power and increasing influence of the Far Right. Perhaps most
ironically, Kiss shows how Viktor Orban and his followers have
embraced the old communist party line that 1956 was a right-wing,
bourgeois uprising, thus co-opting a key historical event that could
have provided a base of legitimacy for a revived vision of Hungarian
democratic socialism. Holzhauser and Kalashnikov investigate the
identity politics of the Party of Democratic Socialism (PDS) in
Germany and the Communist Party of the Russian Federation (CPRF) in
Russia. Finally, Baier's chapter gives a much-needed overview of the
status of the European Left (EL), with specific attention to the
memory politics of communist parties in France, Italy, Spain, and
Greece.

In the second section, "Memorial Landscapes in Central and Eastern
Europe," Alexandra Kuczynska-Zonik, Holubec, and Ekaterina Klimenko
discuss the fate of monuments, memorials, plaques, street names, and
other physical vestiges of the communist past. Kuczynska-Zonik's
chapter on the afterlives of Soviet monuments and statues of Vladimir
Lenin is a particularly useful overview of how different former
Soviet republics have dealt with the materiality of the past. I have
vivid memories of the demolition of the Georgi Dimitrov mausoleum in
the center of Sofia in 1999 over the opposition of about two-thirds
of the population, an act that was supposed to represent Bulgaria's
definitive break with its immediate past.[3] The chapters in this
middle section provide valuable theoretical background as to why
different political decisions were taken to "decommunize" the
landscape across Eastern Europe, and how the public has reacted to
these erasures over time. In particular, the authors suggest that
official anti-communism is a rhetorical tool for upholding the status
quo. Local elites who benefited from restitution policies are
particularly keen to discredit the memory of a system that challenges
their right to their grandparents' private property, and oligarchs
support anti-communist projects to protect their hard-stolen
fortunes. As Kuczynska-Zonik writes: "visiting communist monuments in
dilapidated states today, collected as they are in museums of
communism, placing them in ironic, demonized or even nostalgic
context, leads the visitor to accept the current world order rather
than question it" (p. 114).

The final section of the book, "Communist Politics of Memory before
1989," brings the reader back in time and the various historical
battles played out in Poland, Romania, Czechoslovakia, and the USSR.
Jakub Szumski explores the travails of the Polish United Workers'
Party as they attempted to produce an official story about the
imposition of martial law in 1980. Monica Ciobanu writes a
fascinating chapter about the memory politics of Romania's first
communist regime between 1945 and 1965. In Czechoslovakia, Darina
Volf does a close reading of national historiography after the
communist takeover, with an astute discussion of the roles of
pan-Slavicism and local fears of Western imperialism. Of particular
interest are the two chapters dealing with the production of
historical memory through the writing of memoirs. Mrozik provides
careful readings of the post-1956 memoirs of Polish communist women
in an attempt to create a gendered history of the Polish Left. Oksana
Klymenko reveals the "memory project" of the October Revolution in
the Soviet Union and the attempt to create an official narrative in
the 1920s, the first such project of the new Bolshevik leaders.

Taken together, all of the chapters elucidate the complex and
ever-shifting terrain of history and public memory and the various
rhetorical strategies used and abused to make events in the past
serve a legitimizing function for the political realities of the
present. As is the case with most edited volumes, the book sometimes
feels a bit disjointed, and would have benefited from a concluding
chapter that pulled together all of the various threads of the
arguments contained between the book's covers. Overall, however, the
quality of the scholarship is superb and individual chapters could
easily be used in both undergraduate and graduate courses in history,
anthropology, political science, or Russian and East European
studies.

In his "The Eighteenth Brumaire of Louis Bonaparte," Karl Marx
explained that social revolution could not "take its poetry from the
past but only from the future. It cannot begin with itself before it
has stripped away all superstition about the past."[4] In putting
together this edited volume, Mrozik and Holubec have taken some
important steps in beginning to strip away the superstition about the
past. I applaud their desire to challenge the totalitarian thesis
about twentieth-century state socialism in Eastern Europe. This
critical nuancing of the recent past, undertaken by young scholars in
the region, is essential if we are to have more open and honest
debates about the relationship of the communist past to the future of
the contemporary Left. In collecting these thoughtful essays and
publishing this book, Mrozik and Holubec have done the field a great
service--despite the inevitable offers of "free helicopter rides" to
come.

Notes

[1]. Justin Caffier, "Get to Know the Memes of the Alt-Right and
Never Miss a Dog-Whistle Again," Vice.com, January 25, 2017,
https://www.vice.com/en_us/article/ezagwm/get-to-know-the-memes-of-the-alt-right-and-never-miss-a-dog-whistle-again
.

[2]. The White House, "National Day for the Victims of Communism,"
November 7, 2017,
https://www.whitehouse.gov/briefings-statements/national-day-victims-communism/
.

[3]. "Communist Bastion Finally Crumbles," BBC News, August 27, 1999,
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/europe/431854.stm.

[4]. Karl Marx, "The Eighteenth Brumaire of Louis Bonaparte," 1852,
https://www.marxists.org/archive/marx/works/1852/18th-brumaire/ch01.htm.

Citation: Kristen Ghodsee. Review of Mrozik, Agnieszka; Holubec,
Stanislav, eds., _Historical Memory of Central and East European
Communism_. H-Socialisms, H-Net Reviews. July, 2018.
URL: https://www.h-net.org/reviews/showrev.php?id=52553

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons
Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 3.0 United States
License.

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Best regards,

Andrew Stewart
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