Tytuł pozycji:
Dychotomia pamięci w postkomunistycznej Bułgarii
Te democratic breakthrough of 1989 in Bulgaria has resulted in a clearly problemoriented approach of society towards memory and the past. Te process of developing an efcient model of reckoning with the traumatic heritage of communism divides the national community into dichotomous memory groups with their own understanding, assessment and modes of using the past. Developing a memory policy without a clear institutional support (Georgi Lozanov) oscillates between the attitudes of retribution and reconciliation (Ana Luleva, Svetla Kazalarska). Bulgarian society is characterised by a lack of remembrance of the past and its excess at the same time (Ivaĭlo Znepolski). Te recent national past remains unprocessed, which results in the emancipation of private memory, characterised by the ability to overcome the impasse thanks to reliance on shared, non-conficting, fragmentary memories Dorota Gołek-Sepetliewa Dychotomia pamięci w postkomunistycznej Bułgarii 38 of ordinary reality (Az zhiviakh sotsializma, I lived socialism, Georgi Gospodinov, et al.). As it is today, Bulgarian culture of memory is characterised by diverse collective memories, the multiplication of conficts over the interpretation of the past and the fragmentation of memory, which leads to growing antagonisms and social crises