Anxiety, Dissonance and Imperial Amnesia of the European Union

Abstract

According to the master commemorative narrative of the EU, the European integration project represents a break with the violent European past characterised by fragmentation and nationalism, which culminated in World War Two and the crimes of Nazism and Stalinism. However, recent scholarship has criticised the omission of 19th and 20th-century European colonialism from the memory narratives advanced by the EU. In this article, I use the permanent exhibition in the House of European History (HEH) in Brussels to take this insight one step further and make two arguments. Firstly, I show that it is not only colonialism that is erased from official memory but, more broadly, empires and imperialism, although most European history over the past 2000 years was imperial. Secondly, I understand this “imperial amnesia” as an anxiety-controlling mechanism aimed at reducing the dissonance between the self-proclaimed image of a normative and civilian power on the one hand and imperial-like tendencies in its behaviour on the other.

Keywords

European Union, empire, memories, memory, history

Citation

Filip Ejdus, “Anxiety, Dissonance and Imperial Amnesia of the European Union”, International Relations, Vol. 19, No. 73, 2022, pp. 45-60, DOI: 10.33458/uidergisi.1085564

Affiliations

  • Filip EJDUS, Associate Professor, University of Belgrade, Faculty of Political Science, Department of International Studies, Serbia
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