A Thorny Past: The After-War Life, and Beyond, of Nazi World War II Barbed Wire in Norway
Permanent link
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/28478Date
2022-09-20Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Author
Farstadvoll, SteinAbstract
Conflicts have legacies beyond peace treaties and armistices. This article focuses on one example of such an enduring heritage, namely barbed wire left after the Nazi occupation of Norway during World War II. This barbed wire has persisted up to the present day and thus presents a case that can illuminate nuances of a material legacy that is harmful but also an important source of insight and experience of heritage. This involves the incomplete clean up in the postwar years and how the barbed wire continues to pose challenges for present-day and future cultural and natural heritage management. Contemporary archaeology offers insights into the afterlife of war and works as a counterweight to grand historical narratives that mainly focus on the height of armed conflicts.
Publisher
Equinox Publishing LtdCitation
Farstadvoll. A Thorny Past: The After-War Life, and Beyond, of Nazi World War II Barbed Wire in Norway. Journal of Contemporary Archaeology. 2022;9(1):82-103Metadata
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