References
- Auer, Stefan. 2004. Liberal Nationalism in Central Europe. New York: Routledge.
- Balibar, Etienne. 2004. "Quelle « constitution » de l'Europe ?" Lignes 13 (1): 13–32. doi: 10.3917/lignes1.013.0011
- Bauerkämper. 2012. Das umstrittene Gedachtnis. Die Erinnerung an Nationalsozialismus, Faschismus und Krieg in Europe seit 1945. Paderborn: Schoningh.
- Benziger, Karl P. 2008. Imre Nagy. Martyr of the Nation: Contested History, Legitimacy, and Popular Memory in Hungary. New York: Lexington Books.
- Berenskoetter, Felix. 2014. “Parameters of a National Biography.” European Journal of International Relations 20 (1): 262–288. doi: 10.1177/1354066112445290
- Breuer, Lars, and Anna Delius. 2017. “1989 in European Vernacular Memory.” East European Politics & Societies and Cultures 31 (3): 456–478. doi: 10.1177/0888325417710078
- Bull, Anna Cento, and Hans Lauge Hansen. 2016. “On Agonistic Memory.” Memory Studies 9 (4): 390–404. doi: 10.1177/1750698015615935
- Christopoulos, Dimitris. 2017. “Human Rights in a State of Perpetual Emergency.” Open Democracy, January 5 2017. Accessed May 7 2018. https://www.opendemocracy.net/can-europe-make-it/dimitris-christopoulos/human-rights-in-state-of-perpetual-emergency.
- Ciobanu, Monica. 2011. "Rewriting and Remembering Romanian Communism: Some Controversial Issues." Nationalities Papers 39 (2): 205–221. doi: 10.1080/00905992.2010.549472
- Clarke, David. 2014. “Communism and Memory Politics in the European Union.” Central Europe 12 (1): 99–114. doi: 10.1179/1479096314Z.00000000018
- Coromines, Jordi Guixé. 2016. Past and Power: Public Policies on Memory. Debates, from Global to Local.
- Creet, Julia. 2013. "The House of Terror and the Holocaust Memorial Centre: Resentment and Melancholia in Post-89 Hungary." EuropeanStudies: A Journal of European Culture 30 (1): 29–62.
- Deak, Istvan. 2011. Present Day Hungarian Politics and The Memory of 1956. Wilson Center Publications. Accessed July 23 2018. https://www.wilsoncenter.org/publication/136-present-day-hungarian-politics-and-the-memory-1956.
- Deak, Istvan, Jan T. Gross, and Tony Judt, eds. 2000. The Politics of Retribution in Europe: World War II and its Aftermath. Princeton: Princeton University Press.
- De Cesari, Chiara, and Ann Rigney. 2014. "Introduction." In Transnational Memory: Circulation, Articulation, Scales, edited by Chiara de Cesari and Ann Rigney, 23–34. Berlin: de Gruyter.
- Delanty, Gerard. 2005. “The Idea of a Cosmopolitan Europe: On the Cultural Significance of Europeanization.” International Review of Sociology 15 (3): 405–421. doi: 10.1080/03906700500272434
- Diner, Dan. 2003. “Restitution and Memory: the Holocaust in European Political Cultures.” New German Critique 90: 36–44. doi: 10.2307/3211106
- Druliolle, Vincent. 2008. "Democracy Captured By Its Imaginary: The Transition as Memory and Discourses of Constitutionalism in Spain." Social & Legal Studies 17 (1): 75–92. doi: 10.1177/0964663907086457
- Dutceac Segesten, Anamaria. 2011. Myth, Identity, and Conflict: A Comparative Analysis of Romanian and Serbian History Textbooks. Plymouth: Lexington Books.
- Egry, Gabor. 2010. "Why Identity Matters?: Hungary’s New Law on Citizenship and the Reorganisation of an Organic Nation." In Dual Citizenship for Transborder Minorities? How to Respond to the Hungarian-Slovak Tit-for_Tat, edited by Rainer Bauböck, 25–28. Florence: EUI. EUI Working Papers 2010/75.
- Fox, J. E., and P. Vermeersch. 2010. "Backdoor Nationalism." European Journal of Sociology 51 (2): 325–357. doi: 10.1017/S0003975610000159
- Gatrell, Peter. 2018. “Refugees—What’s Wrong with History?” Journal of Refugee Studies 30 (2): 170–189. (178).
- Grosescu, Raluca, and Raluca Ursachi. 2014. "Transitional Trials as History Writing: The Case of the Romanian 1989 Events." In Transitional Criminal Justice in Post dictatorial and post-conflict societies, edited by Agata Fijalkowski and Raluca Grosescu, 69–100. Antwerp: Intersentia.
- Gross, Jan. 2015. Eastern Europe’s Crisis of Shame, Project Syndicate, available online at: https://www.project-syndicate.org/commentary/eastern-europe-refugee-crisis-xenophobia-by-jan-gross-2015-09?barrier=accesspaylog. Accessed July 1 2018.
- Grunwald, Henning. 2013. "Genocide Memorialization and the Europeanization of Europe." In The Use and Abuse of Memory: Interpreting World War II in Contemporary Politics, edited by Christian Karner, 13–30. Piscataway, NJ: Transaction Publishers.
- Gussi, Alexandru. 2011. La Roumanie face a son passe communisteMémoires et cultures politiques. Paris: L'Harmattan.
- Harms, Victoria. 2017. “A Tale of Two Revolutions: Hungary’s 1956 and the Un-Doing of 1989.” East European Politics & Societies and Cultures 31 (3): 479–499. doi: 10.1177/0888325417703184
- Jarausch, Konrad Hugo, Thomas Lindenberger, and Annelie Ramsbrock, eds. 2007. Conflicted Memories: Europeanizing Contemporary Histories. London: Berghahn Book.
- Kleist, J. Olaf, and Irial Glynn. 2012. "History, Memory and Migration: Comparisons, Challenges and Outlooks." In History, Memory and Migration Perceptions of the Past and the Politics of Incorporation, edited by J. Olaf Kleist and Irial Glynn, 237–243. London: Palgrave Macmillan.
- Koranyi, James. 2015. "The Thirteen Martyrs of Arad: a Monumental Hungarian History." In Sites of Imperial Memory: Commemorating Colonial Rule in the Nineteenth, edited by Dominik Geppert and Frank Lorenz Müller, 53–69. Manchester: Manchester University Press.
- Laczó, Ferenc. 2015. "Five Faces of Hungarian Post-Dissident Liberalism: A Study in Agendas, Concepts and Ambiguities." In Thinking Through Transition: Liberal Democracy, Authoritarian Pasts and Intellectual History in East Central Europe After 1989, edited by M. Kopeček and P. Wciślik, 39–72. Budapest: CEU Press[AQ50].
- Laczó, Ferenc. 2016. "Hungarian Uprising: From the Power of a Symbol to a Symbol of Power?" Heinrich Boll Shiftung. Accessed June 3 2018. https://www.boell.de/en/2016/11/03/power-symbol-symbol-power-commemorating-1956-hungary-today.
- Laczó, Ferenc, and Joanna Wawrzyniak. 2017. "Memories of 1989 in Europe Between Hope, Dismay, and Neglect." East European Politics and Societies 31 (3): 431–438. doi: 10.1177/0888325417698741
- Laegaard, Sune. 2007. “Liberal Nationalism and the Nationalisation of Liberal Values.” Nations and Nationalism 13 (1): 37–55. doi: 10.1111/j.1469-8129.2007.00269.x
- Lagrou, Pieter. 1999. The Legacy of Nazi Occupation : Patriotic Memory and National Recovery in Western Europe, 1945-1965. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
- Leggewie, Claus, and Anne Lang. 2011. Der Kampf um die europäische Erinnerung. Berlin: C.H.Beck.
- Levy, Daniel, and Natan Sznaider. 2010. Human Rights and Memory. Pennsylvania Park: University of Pennsylvania Press.
- Malksoo, Maria. 2010. The Politics of Becoming European : a Study of Polish and Baltic Post-Cold War Security Imaginaries. New York, London: Routledge.
- Mark, James. 2010. The Unfinished Revolution Making Sense of the Communist Past in Central Eastern Europe. New Haven: Yake University Press.
- Márton, László, and Zoltán Csaba Novák. 2016. Provocarea libertăţii. Târgu-Mureş, 16-21 martie 1990. Cluj Napoca: Institutul pentru Studierea Problemelor Minorităţilor Naţionale.
- Muller, Jan Werner. 2007. Constitutional Patriotism. New Jersey: Princeton University Press.
- Murgescu, Bogdan. 2012. Revoluția română din 1989: Istorie și memorie.
- Olick, Jeffrey. 2007. The Politics of Regret. On Collective Memory and Historical Responsibility. New York: Routledge.
- Peto, Andrea. 2017. “Revisionist Histories, ‘Future Memories’: Far-Right Memorialization Practices.” Hungary European Politics and Society 18 (1): 41–51. doi: 10.1080/23745118.2016.1269442
- Petrescu, Dragos, and Cristina Petrescu. 2014. "From Autobiographic Recollections to Collective Representations." In Remembering Communism: Private and Public Recollections of Lived Experience, edited by Maria Todorova, Augusta Dimou, and Stefan Troebst, 43–70. Budapest: CEU University Press.
- Pop Eleches, Grigore. 2014. "Romania Twenty Years After 1989: The Bizarre Echoes of a Contested Revolution." In Twenty Years After Communism, edited by M. Bernhard and J. Kubik, 85–104. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
- Sabic, Senada. 2017. "Humanitarianism and Its Limits: The Refugee Crisis Response in Croatia." In The Migrant Crisis: European Perspectives and National Discourses, edited by Melani Barlai, Birte Fähnrich, Christina Griessler, and Markus Rhomberg, 93–107. Zurich: Lit Verlag.
- Sarotte, Mary Elise. 2009. The Struggle to Create Post-Cold War Europe. Princeton: Princeton University Press.
- Seleny, Anna. 2014. "Revolutionary Road: 1956 and the Fracturing of Hungarian Historical Memory." In Twenty Years After Communism, edited by M. Bernhard and J. Kubik, 34–60. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
- Siani Davies, Peter. 2005. The Romanian Revolution of December 1989. Ithaca: Cornell University Press.
- Soysal, Yasemin Nuhoğlu. 2010. “Unpacking Cosmopolitanism: an Insider–Outsider’s Reading.” The British Journal of Sociology 61: 405–411. doi: 10.1111/j.1468-4446.2009.01296.x
- Stone, Dan. 2018. “Refugees Then and now: Memory, History and Politics in the Long Twentieth Century: an Introduction.” Patterns of Prejudice 52 (2–3): 101–106. doi:10.1080/0031322X.2018.1433004.
- Strath, Bo. 2002. “A European Identity To the Historical Limits of a Concept.” European Journal of Social Theory 5 (4): 387–340. doi: 10.1177/136843102760513965
- Strath, Bo, and Małgorzata Pakier, eds. 2010. A European Memory: Contested Histories and Politics of Remembrance. Oxford: Berghahn Books.
- Tamas, Gaspar Miklos. 2000. "On Post-Fascism The Degradation of Universal Citizenship." Boston Review. A Political and Literary Forum. Accessed April 3 2018. http://bostonreview.net/world/g-m-tamas-post-fascism.
- Ther, Philipp. 2016. Europe Since 1989. Princeton: Princeton University Press.
- Tileagă, Cristian. 2012. "Communism in Retrospect: The Rhetoric of Historical Representation and Writing the Collective Memory of Recent Past." Memory Studies 5 (4): 462–478. doi: 10.1177/1750698011434042
- Touquet, Heleen, and Peter Vermeersch. 2016. “Changing Frames of Reconciliation.” East European Politics & Societies and Cultures 30 (1): 55–73. doi: 10.1177/0888325415584048