References of "Venken, Machteld 50038615"
     in
Bookmark and Share    
See detailEditoriaal. Erfgoed en migratie.
Venken, Machteld UL

in Tijd-Schrift: Heemkunde en Lokaal-Erfgoedpraktijk in Vlaanderen (2012), 2

Detailed reference viewed: 21 (1 UL)
Full Text
Peer Reviewed
See detail'You still live far from the Motherland, but you are her son, her daughter'. War Memory and Soviet Mental Space (1945-2011)
Venken, Machteld UL

in Mink, Georges; Neumayer, Laure (Eds.) History, Memory and Politics in Central, East and South East Europe (2012)

Detailed reference viewed: 42 (1 UL)
See detailMaking meaning of war experiences: Polish ex-combatants settled in Belgium and in Poland
Venken, Machteld UL; Filipkowski, Piotr

Presentation (2012)

Detailed reference viewed: 16 (0 UL)
See detailEast-West Comparisons
Venken, Machteld UL

Presentation (2012)

Detailed reference viewed: 13 (0 UL)
See detailIn their own words. War experiences of Polish child forced labourers
Venken, Machteld UL

Presentation (2012)

Detailed reference viewed: 17 (0 UL)
See detailBorder Studies meet Migration Studies? Similarities and Differences
Venken, Machteld UL

Presentation (2012)

Detailed reference viewed: 17 (0 UL)
See detailEducating Children about War in the Historical East Prussia Region
Venken, Machteld UL

Presentation (2011)

Detailed reference viewed: 16 (0 UL)
See detailDiscussant: From the Iron Curtain to the Schengen Area
Venken, Machteld UL

Presentation (2011)

Detailed reference viewed: 16 (0 UL)
Full Text
See detailStraddling the Iron Curtain? Immigrants, Immigrant Organisations, War Memories
Venken, Machteld UL

Book published by Peter Lang Verlag (2011)

In the aftermath of World War II, two migration streams entered Belgium: former allied soldiers from Poland and former Ostarbeiterinnen from the Soviet Union. This book focused on these people's attempts ... [more ▼]

In the aftermath of World War II, two migration streams entered Belgium: former allied soldiers from Poland and former Ostarbeiterinnen from the Soviet Union. This book focused on these people's attempts to give meaning to their war experiences in post-war life, and delineates the various processes they used to understand and articulate what they have been through. These processes were shaped not only by characteristics of the war experiences themselves, but also by the changing positions which these immigrant men and women held within them, how they gathered in groups in order to remember their war experiences, and how they were integrated into, and/or excluded from, their home and host societies over time. [less ▲]

Detailed reference viewed: 64 (7 UL)