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(2011) European identity and the second world war, Basingstoke, Palgrave Macmillan.
Holocaust literature and the shaping of European identity after the second world war
the case of Jorge Semprun
Karen-Margrethe L. Simonsen
pp. 205-223
War is radical conflict. Therefore the notion that it can become the root not just of one-sided identity (us against the enemy) but also of a common identity (us and the enemy) is apparently paradoxical. Yet this is not a new idea. In 1828 Goethe speculated that the Napoleonic wars, which had split Europe, might create a new basis for a common European spirit. Presumably, this common spirit would be created because of the war and not class="EmphasisTypeItalic ">despite the war.
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Full citation:
Simonsen, K. L. (2011)., Holocaust literature and the shaping of European identity after the second world war: the case of Jorge Semprun, in M. Spiering & M. Wintle (eds.), European identity and the second world war, Basingstoke, Palgrave Macmillan, pp. 205-223.
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