Brody always on my mind: the mental mapping of a Jewish city |
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Authors: | Börries Kuzmany |
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Affiliation: | 1. Institute of Slavonic Studies, University of Vienna , Vienna , Austria boerries.kuzmany@univie.ac.at |
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Abstract: | Once overwhelmingly inhabited by Jews, the Austro-Galician border town of Brody, in present-day Western Ukraine, has retained an important place on Ashkenazi mental maps until today, even though scholarly studies on Brody are scarce. The present article tries to capture the elements that allowed Brody to inscribe itself so successfully in Jewish memory. Therefore, this paper analyses several lieux de mémoire underlining Brody's enduring perception as a town closely related to Jewish issues. These places, however, are not only physical spots in the cityscape, like the ruins of the synagogue and the cemetery, but also images of and texts about Brody. Whether intended or not, pictures and postcards also have an impact on how Brody has been remembered; and so do memory books, be they written in Yiddish, Hebrew, Polish or Ukrainian. This study argues that Brody appears on the mental maps of Eastern European Jewry as an amalgam of physical places, icons and texts linked to a multi-layered and multifaceted urban history |
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Keywords: | Brody Galicia Jewish city mental mapping lieux de mémoire collective memory urban history borderlands |
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