Ljiljana Radonić

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Ljiljana Radonić (* 1981 in Zagreb , Croatia ) is a political scientist from Vienna who, from 2019 to 2024, was responsible for the ERC Consolidator Grant-funded project on "Globalized Memorial Museums. Exhibiting Atrocities in the Era of Claims for Moral Universals" at the Austrian Academy who directs science.

Life

Ljiljana Radonić studied political science, philosophy and translation (Bosnian / Croatian / Serbian and English) at the University of Vienna . She completed her doctoral studies as part of the initiative group “Cultures of Difference. Transformation in Central Europe ".

Her dissertation on Croatian politics of the past between revisionism and European standards was published in 2010 by Campus Verlag with a foreword by Aleida Assmann and was awarded the Michael Mitterauer Prize for Social, Cultural and Economic History in Vienna in May 2012 (main prize). 2013–2019 habilitation project on the “Second World War in Post-Socialist Memorial Museums. History politics between the 'invocation of Europe' and the focus on 'our' suffering "at the Institute for Cultural Studies and Theater History of the Austrian Academy of Sciences , from 2013 to 2017 as part of an APART grant, 2018/19 as an Elise Richter grant from the FWF . Submitted in 2019 at the Institute for Political Science at the University of Vienna, habilitation colloquium in May 2020. In November 2018 she received the European Research Council (ERC) Consolidator Grant, worth almost 2 million, and from 2019 to 2024 she is leading a project on "Globalized Memorial Museums. Exhibiting Atrocities in the Era of Claims for Moral Universals ", in which she and a team investigate 50 museums worldwide.

Since 2004 she has been a lecturer at the Institute for Political Science at the University of Vienna and mainly teaches on (East Central and Southeastern) European memory conflicts since 1989 as well as on anti-Semitism theory. In the 2015 summer semester she was visiting professor for critical social theory at the Justus Liebig University in Gießen, where she held courses on “Psychoanalysis as a critical social theory”, “Theory of anti-Semitism”, “Gender relations, National Socialism and anti-Semitism” and on “(East Central and Southeastern ) European memory conflicts since 1989 ”. In the winter semester of 2016 she was a Research Fellow at the International Research Center for Cultural Studies (IFK) in Vienna. In the summer semester 2017 she was visiting professor at the Center for Jewish Studies at the University of Graz, where she gave a lecture on anti-Semitism theory and two seminars, for example on the memory of Shaoh and Porajmos in comparison.

Radonić has been a member of the Young Academy of the Austrian Academy of Sciences since 2019 .

Publications

Books

  • The contested museum. Exhibiting contemporary history between deconstruction and the creation of meaning, ed. with Heidemarie Uhl, Bielefeld: transcript 2020.
  • The peaceful anti-Semite? Critical theory about gender relations and anti-Semitism, Frankfurt am Main / Vienna: Peter Lang Verlag 2004.
  • With joy. Psychoanalysis and social criticism, edited with Renate Göllner, Freiburg: Ça ira Verlag 2007.
  • War for memory - Croatian politics of the past between revisionism and European standards, Frankfurt am Main: Campus-Verlag 2010.
  • Memory in the 21st Century. On the redesign of a key concept in cultural studies, edited with Heidemarie Uhl, Bielefeld: Transcript Verlag 2016.
  • Auschwitz in context - the former concentration camps in current European memory , Vienna: Peter Lang 2017.
  • The peaceful anti-Semite reloaded. Female victim myths and gender-specific anti-Semitic "wrong healing" , Graz: Clio 2018.
  • Special issue: The Holocaust / Genocide Template in Eastern Europe , Journal of Genocide Research 4/2018.
  • The Holocaust / Genocide Template in Eastern Europe , London / New York: Routledge 2019.
  • The contested museum. Exhibiting contemporary history between deconstruction and the creation of meaning , edited with Heidemarie Uhl, Bielefeld: transcript 2020.

items

  • Psychopathology of normality. The Importance of Psychoanalysis for Critical Theory. In: Stephan Grigat (ed.): Enemy reconnaissance and re-education. Critical theory against post-Nazism and Islamism. Freiburg 2006.
  • The consolidation of a broken democracy? Croatia from 1990 to today. In: Forschungsstelle Osteuropa (Ed.): Regime change and social change in Eastern Europe. Bremen 2007.
  • Psychoanalysis as a gender theory - Freud and his critics. In: Renate Göllner, Ljiljana Radonić (ed.): With Freud. Psychoanalysis and social criticism. Freiburg 2007.
  • Politics of the Past in Croatia - From historical revisionism to coming to terms with the past? In: zeitgeschichte 5/2008 ( historical politics in Croatia).
  • Birth machines and followers? - On how the “New Women's Movement” deals with National Socialism and anti-Semitism. In: Peter Fleissner, Natascha Wanek (Ed.): BruchStücke. Critical approaches to politics and economics. Berlin 2009.
  • Revisionism and politics of the past in Croatia - the Europeanization of the Holocaust? In: Christoph Kühberger, Clemens Sedmak (ed.): European history culture - European history policy. About inventing, discovering and working out the importance of memory and history for understanding and understanding Europe. Innsbruck 2009.
  • Politics of the past in Croatia between revisionism and European standards. In: Kerstin von Lingen (ed.): War experience and national identity in Europe after 1945. Remembrance, purification processes and national memory. Paderborn 2009.
  • War for the memory of the Jasenovac concentration camp - Croatia between revisionism and European standards. In: Heinz Fassmann, Wolfgang Müller-Funk, Heidemarie Uhl (eds.): Cultures of Difference - Transformation Processes in Central Europe after 1989. Transdisciplinary Perspectives. Göttingen 2009.
  • Politics of the past in Croatia. In: Ingrid Böhler et al .: 7th Austrian Contemporary History Day 2008. Innsbruck 2010.
  • European cultures of remembrance in the field of tension between “East” and “West”. In: Information on political education 32/2010.
  • Croatian politics of the past between nationalism and democratization. In: Birgit Hofmann et al. (Ed.): Overcoming dictatorship in Europe. New national and transnational perspectives. Heidelberg 2010.
  • Democratization or renewed monopoly? History and politics of memory in post-socialist Slovenia and Croatia (together with Oto Luthar). In: Helmut Konrad, Stefan Benedik (eds.): Mapping Contemporary History II. Vienna 2010.
  • Univerzalizacija holokausta na primjeru hrvatske politike prošlosti i spomen-područja Jasenovac (PDF). In: Suvremene teme / Contemporary Issues 1/2010.
  • Remember Europe - Looking for a European culture of remembrance? In: Learning & Teaching 1/2011.
  • Conflicting Memories in “Unified Europe” - Standards of Remembrance in the Center and at the Periphery. In: The Danube Region 3–4 / 2010.
  • Croatia - Exhibiting Memory and History at the “Shores of Europe”. In: Culture Unbound. Journal of Current Cultural Research 3/2011.
  • "Our" heroes, victims, perpetrators - The Second World War in Croatian textbooks. In: Eastern Europe 11/2011.
  • Europeanization of the memory of the Croatian Jasenovac concentration camp. How European are post-socialist memorial museums? In: European History Theme Portal 2012.
  • Sećanje kao polje političkog delovanja u kontekstu “Evropeizacije sećanja” / Memory as a Political Field of Action in the Context of the “Europeanization of Memory”. In: Dušica Dražić, Slavica Radišić, Marijana Simu (eds.): Sećanje grada / Memory of the City, Belgrad 2012.
  • Standards of evasion - Croatia and the “Europeanization of memory”. In: Eurozine 2012.
  • The first post-socialist trial against a war criminal from the Second World War - Croatia as an example of an exemplary approach? In: Austrian Journal for Political Science ( Memento from July 1, 2013 in the Internet Archive ) 1/2012.
  • Croatia's Transformation Process from Historical Revisionism to European Standards. In: Davor Pauković, Vjeran Pavlaković, Višeslav Raos (eds.): Confronting the Past: European Experiences, Centar za politološka istraživanja, Zagreb 2012.
  • Croatian Politics of the Past - Just one more Post-Communist Case Study? In: Istorija 20. veka 1/2012.
  • Transformation of Memory in Croatia: Removing Yugoslav Anti-Fascism. In: Eric Langenbacher, Bill Niven, Ruth Wittlinger (Eds.): Dynamics of Memory and Identity in Contemporary Europe. Berghahn Books, New York 2013.
  • Culture and politics of remembrance in Croatia. In: From Politics and Contemporary History 17/2013.
  • Croatia's Politics of the Past during the Tuđman Era (1990–1999) - Old Wine in New Bottles? In: Austrian History Yearbook XLIV 2013.
  • Croatia - new EU member. In: Interest 2/2013.
  • Ante in Croatia and Europe - a confused acquittal. In: sans phrase 2/2013.
  • Acquittal for Croatian generals Ante Gotovina and Mladen Markač. In: Forum Geschichtskulturen, Imre Kertész Kolleg Jena, August 20, 2013.
  • “Serbian Terrorists” in the classroom - Croatian textbooks about the “Homeland War”. In: Versorgerin # 99, September 2013.
  • Slovak and Croatian invocation of Europe: the Museum of the Slovak National Uprising and the Jasenovac Memorial Museum. In: Nationalities Papers: The Journal of Nationalism and Ethnicity, March 2014.
  • Post-socialist memorial museums between national victim narratives and the 'Europeanization of memory' . In: Yearbook for Politics and History 2014.
  • 'People of Freedom and Unlimited Movement': Representations of Roma in Post-Communist Memorial Museums . In: Social Inclusion 5/2015.
  • "You cannot be Jewish and Feminist" - From Feminist Anti-Semitism to Post-Feminist 'Post-Zionism' . In: Journal for the Study of Antisemitism 2/2015.
  • Visualizing Perpetrators and Victims in Post-Communist Memorial Museums . In: Yad Vashem Studies 2/2016.
  • Post-communist invocation of Europe: memorial museums' narratives and the Europeanization of memory . In: National Identities 2/2017.
  • Post-Communist Memorial Museums from Jasenovac to Tallinn - Visualizing Perpetrators and Victims. In: Hildegard Frübis, Clara Oberle, Agnieszka Pufelska (eds.): Photographs from the camps of the Nazi regime. Preservation of evidence and aesthetic practice , Writings of the Center for Jewish Studies 31, Vienna 2018.
  • From "Double Genocide" to "the New Jews": Holocaust, Genocide and Mass Violence in Post-Communist Memorial Museums. In: Journal of Genocide Research 4/2018.
  • The Holocaust Template - Memorial Museums in Hungary, Croatia and Bosnia-Herzegovina . In: Annals of the Croatian Political Science Association: political science journal 1/2018
  • Commemorating Bleiburg - Croatia's Struggle with Historical Revisionism . In: Cultures of History Forum, June 11, 2019

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. GMM. Retrieved October 30, 2019 .
  2. Initiativkolleg “Cultures of Difference. Transformation in Central Europe " ( Memento from April 2, 2015 in the Internet Archive )
  3. Dissertation at campus.de ( Memento from October 27, 2016 in the Internet Archive )
  4. ^ Ljiljana Radonić: The Second World War in post-socialist memorial museums (PDF) at homepage.univie.ac.at.
  5. Project website "Globalized Memorial Museums". Retrieved October 30, 2019 .
  6. Vita on Ljiljana Radonić's homepage
  7. University of Giessen SS 2015. Retrieved October 27, 2016 .
  8. International Research Center for Cultural Studies. Retrieved October 27, 2016 .
  9. Visiting professor at the Center for Jewish Studies. Archived from the original on February 17, 2017 ; accessed on February 17, 2017 .