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dc.contributor.authorBohatyrets, Valentyna
dc.contributor.authorMelnychuk, Liubov
dc.date.accessioned2022-11-17T10:22:09Z
dc.date.available2022-11-17T10:22:09Z
dc.date.issued2020-10-15
dc.identifier.citationVALENTYNA BOHATYRETS AND LIUBOV MELNYCHUK, Chernivtsi’s Squares and Monuments in the Context of Distinctive Bukovinian Identity, Cultural Heritages and Urban Historical Memory, in Daniel Dumitran (ed.), The Cities of Central and Eastern Europe in the Last Century: Urban Projects and Developments After 1918, Cluj-Napoca, Mega, 2020 (Annales Universitatis Apulensis Series Historica 24/I, 2020): 45-77. Chernivtsi’s Squares and Monuments in the Context of Distinctive Bukovinian Identity, Cultural Heritages and Urban Historical Memoryuk_UA
dc.identifier.otherDoi https://doi.org/10.29302/auash.2020.24.1.3
dc.identifier.urihttps://archer.chnu.edu.ua/xmlui/handle/123456789/5629
dc.descriptionSCOPUSuk_UA
dc.description.abstractSince the twentieth century, the interdisciplinary field of ‘memory studies’ has become especially topical and drawn upon a variety of theoretical perspectives, while offering a plethora of empirical case studies exploring the politics of memory and urban space, cultural heritage and cultural identity that mould a space’s distinctiveness. This study draws on a comparative analysis to theoretically prove and develop a multifaceted memory of Chernivtsi’s significantly transformed and enriched urban landscape through an interdisciplinary approach involving various methods and instruments for handling the essential societal resources of history, memory and identity. The city of Chernivtsi and the region of Bukovina, historically part of Central Eastern Europe and geo-strategically the heart of Europe, has recently strengthened its voice in becoming culturally and economically bound to the European Union. As a well-preserved city ruled, at different times, by the Habsburg Empire (1900-1918), Romania (1918-1939) and the USSR (1940/41-1991), Chernivtsi (Czernowitz, Cernăuţi, Chernovtsy) serves as a case study for exploring the human fingerprints of every epoch. The city’s architectural diversity offers testimony as to how Chernivtsi’s urban society preserved its unique landscape of identity, embodied in a patchwork of ethnic, linguistic and confessional affiliations, while integrating representational claims and moderating its space. This study analyses the policies and practices of these three epochs in Chernivtsi’s history, in terms of how the city attempted to promote, develop and preserve its cultural heritage, while preserving the collective memory and shaping supranational identityuk_UA
dc.description.sponsorshipКафедра сучасних іноземних мов та перекладуuk_UA
dc.language.isoenuk_UA
dc.publisherAnnales Universitatis Apulensis, Editura Megauk_UA
dc.relation.ispartofseriesSeries Historica 24;1
dc.subjectBukovinian supranational identityuk_UA
dc.subjectcultural heritageuk_UA
dc.subjecturban spaceuk_UA
dc.subjectmemory studiesuk_UA
dc.subjectChernivtsiuk_UA
dc.titleChernivtsi’s Squares and Monuments in the Context of Distinctive Bukovinian Identity, Cultural Heritages and Urban Historical Memoryuk_UA
dc.typeArticleuk_UA


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