Abstract
This paper examines popular reactions to the so-called Wehrmachtsausstellung through the lens of entries in the exhibition’s visitors’ books. The majority of such entries are informed by visitors’ generational identity vis-à-vis National Socialism. Harlad Welzer’s theory of memory, derived from his studies of multi-generational family discourse about the Nazi past, provides a framework for analysing the entries. Similarities and differences emerge between Welzer’s observations and the entries in the visitors’ books. While the books represent just one among many possible sources that shed light on popular reactions to the exhibition, they nevertheless provide a fruitful source of enquiry for an understanding of the dynamic between public history and individual/family memory in the construction of historical consciousness about the legacy of National Socialism.
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