Exhibiting Ethnic Minorities, Democratizing History: Cold War Legacies and the Jews in Poland’s Visible Sphere
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Abstract
This book chapter explores how Soviet Cold War visual doctrines and their legacies have conditioned the appearance of Jews in Poland’s visible sphere of the Polish People’s Republic and during the emergence of the post-communist Third Polish Republic. It focuses on the effects of a 1994 crowed-sourced photography contest that culminated in an exhibition, a book, and a collection of over 7000 photographic records concerning Polish-Jewish visual and living heritage. While doing so, the chapter unravels the means which the Polish state employed during the communist era to control the representational visibility of ethnic minorities and secure an impression of Poland as a socially and politically homogenized country. Analyzing the sociocultural outcomes caused by the reintroduction of images of Jews into Poland’s post-communist visible sphere, the chapter highlights the role they have played in assisting Polish society to overcome Soviet Cold War definitions of Polish culture, collective memory, history and identity.