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Förintelseforskningen i Norden : Från historiskt undantag till demokratisk grundton

Rosengren, Henrik LU (2024) In Scandia 90(2).
Abstract
Something that all Nordic countries have in common is that journalistic work, popular culture phenomena and public debates resulting in subsequent political initiatives have served as driving forces in the development of academic research on the Holocaust. It is also clear that the field is heavily politicized, imbued with moral questions and highly diversified.

The memories of the Holocaust have in all Nordic countries been filtered through existing post-war narratives about the nation. In Norway, this has mainly concerned the wound inflicted by the Quisling regime and the Nazi occupation and, based on that, the resistance movement, the authorities and the role of the police force. In Finland, the construction of a collective... (More)
Something that all Nordic countries have in common is that journalistic work, popular culture phenomena and public debates resulting in subsequent political initiatives have served as driving forces in the development of academic research on the Holocaust. It is also clear that the field is heavily politicized, imbued with moral questions and highly diversified.

The memories of the Holocaust have in all Nordic countries been filtered through existing post-war narratives about the nation. In Norway, this has mainly concerned the wound inflicted by the Quisling regime and the Nazi occupation and, based on that, the resistance movement, the authorities and the role of the police force. In Finland, the construction of a collective memory has occurred in relation to Finland’s relationship with the Soviet Union. The Holocaust was not seen as part of Finnish history. In Denmark, the Danish national heroic story of the rescue of the Danish Jews was instrumental for how the Holocaust was to be remembered and understood. For Sweden, a strongly forward-looking neutrality and welfare narrative has long displaced the fact that Sweden also constitutes a part of the history of the Holocaust.

However, the strong national narratives have been challenged both within and outside the academy, primarily based on European, global and moral values, in addition to values critical of modernity. Slowly, the memory of the Holocaust has evolved from being seen as a less relevant event to an obvious cultural memory integrated into questions of democracy, guilt, morality and human rights. The memory of the Holocaust has also become a political tool and thereby a battlefield for the construction of identity.

This research field is faced with a number of future challenges related to the fact that the generation experiencing the Holocaust soon will be gone as well as the question to what extent the obvious position of the Holocaust in many instances, for example in school, will persist. Current Holocaust research is in many ways the result of a changing world system in which the bipolar, cold war system has been replaced by a multipolar system in which other historical perspectives were and are seen as urgent. At the same time, the national narratives have made a great comeback, which contributes to increasing tensions regarding what should be considered important history. Holocaust research is situated in the middle of these historical currents. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
author
organization
alternative title
The Nordic Countries and Holocaust Historiography : From Exception to Democratic Foundation
publishing date
type
Contribution to journal
publication status
published
subject
keywords
Holocaust, memory, historiography, Nordic countries, historical culture
in
Scandia
volume
90
issue
2
publisher
Statens Humanistiska Forskningsrad
external identifiers
  • scopus:85215000353
ISSN
0036-5483
DOI
10.47868/scandia.v90i2.27279
language
Swedish
LU publication?
yes
id
f656c24c-bfa5-46fe-9450-a757f9b7dc24
date added to LUP
2025-01-07 13:39:19
date last changed
2025-04-04 14:52:08
@article{f656c24c-bfa5-46fe-9450-a757f9b7dc24,
  abstract     = {{Something that all Nordic countries have in common is that journalistic work, popular culture phenomena and public debates resulting in subsequent political initiatives have served as driving forces in the development of academic research on the Holocaust. It is also clear that the field is heavily politicized, imbued with moral questions and highly diversified.<br/><br/>The memories of the Holocaust have in all Nordic countries been filtered through existing post-war narratives about the nation. In Norway, this has mainly concerned the wound inflicted by the Quisling regime and the Nazi occupation and, based on that, the resistance movement, the authorities and the role of the police force. In Finland, the construction of a collective memory has occurred in relation to Finland’s relationship with the Soviet Union. The Holocaust was not seen as part of Finnish history. In Denmark, the Danish national heroic story of the rescue of the Danish Jews was instrumental for how the Holocaust was to be remembered and understood. For Sweden, a strongly forward-looking neutrality and welfare narrative has long displaced the fact that Sweden also constitutes a part of the history of the Holocaust.<br/><br/>However, the strong national narratives have been challenged both within and outside the academy, primarily based on European, global and moral values, in addition to values critical of modernity. Slowly, the memory of the Holocaust has evolved from being seen as a less relevant event to an obvious cultural memory integrated into questions of democracy, guilt, morality and human rights. The memory of the Holocaust has also become a political tool and thereby a battlefield for the construction of identity.<br/><br/>This research field is faced with a number of future challenges related to the fact that the generation experiencing the Holocaust soon will be gone as well as the question to what extent the obvious position of the Holocaust in many instances, for example in school, will persist. Current Holocaust research is in many ways the result of a changing world system in which the bipolar, cold war system has been replaced by a multipolar system in which other historical perspectives were and are seen as urgent. At the same time, the national narratives have made a great comeback, which contributes to increasing tensions regarding what should be considered important history. Holocaust research is situated in the middle of these historical currents.}},
  author       = {{Rosengren, Henrik}},
  issn         = {{0036-5483}},
  keywords     = {{Holocaust; memory; historiography; Nordic countries; historical culture}},
  language     = {{swe}},
  month        = {{12}},
  number       = {{2}},
  publisher    = {{Statens Humanistiska Forskningsrad}},
  series       = {{Scandia}},
  title        = {{Förintelseforskningen i Norden : Från historiskt undantag till demokratisk grundton}},
  url          = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.47868/scandia.v90i2.27279}},
  doi          = {{10.47868/scandia.v90i2.27279}},
  volume       = {{90}},
  year         = {{2024}},
}