2020
DOI: 10.1111/jcms.12976
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In Search of Lost Time: Memory‐framing, Bilateral Identity‐making, and European Security

Abstract: Bilateral relations between France and either Germany or the UK are the backbone of European security and defence cooperation. From a strategic and cultural point of view, these relations are not self‐evident. In this article, we track the memory‐framing processes accompanying the creation of major bilateral initiatives. Leaders such as Adenauer and De Gaulle, Mitterrand and Kohl, Blair and Chirac, and Sarkozy and Cameron imagined bilateral communities of fate informed by mutually understandable historical mem… Show more

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Cited by 12 publications
(11 citation statements)
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“…Conversely, military cooperation and élite socialization is the centre of the contribution by Stephanie Hofmann and Frédéric Mérand (). In this article, Hofmann and Mérand explore the construction of collective memory frames, that is, how political leaders used reference points from the past to create a community of fate, structuring their world‐views when it came to matters of national defence and cooperation.…”
Section: The Structure Of This Special Issuementioning
confidence: 99%
“…Conversely, military cooperation and élite socialization is the centre of the contribution by Stephanie Hofmann and Frédéric Mérand (). In this article, Hofmann and Mérand explore the construction of collective memory frames, that is, how political leaders used reference points from the past to create a community of fate, structuring their world‐views when it came to matters of national defence and cooperation.…”
Section: The Structure Of This Special Issuementioning
confidence: 99%
“…This is not to say that institutionalized relationships are perfectly elastic – that is, that they automatically return to their original shape after the pressure is removed. Instead, shared experiences and memories can have lasting effects (Hofmann and Mérand, 2020); hence, some changes or at least fears are likely to stay.…”
Section: Institutional Elasticity and Political Relationshipsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The history of the ECSC demonstrates that sharing a common history of destruction relating to not one but two world wars united the discourse of the founding fathers of the European integration project (see also contribution by Hoffmann and Mérand, ). In their pursuit of a united, peaceful and prosperous Europe, Konrad Adenauer, Alcide De Gasperi and Robert Schuman drew on the European peace initiatives promoted by the Pan‐European and other movements founded in the 1920s or the European union, which French Foreign Minister Aristide Briand proposed to the General Assembly of the League of Nations, with the support of his German counterpart, Gustav Stresemann, in September 1929 (Stevenson, ; Loth, , pp.…”
Section: The Transfer Of Core State Powers Identity Politics Andmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In short, the beginnings of European integration were originally driven by attempts of interwar and postwar elites to integrate core state powers over external security. Their attempts were legitimized by their shared narratives of overcoming a common past of war and destruction (see also Hofmann and Mérand, ; Patel, , pp. 88–90).…”
Section: The Transfer Of Core State Powers Identity Politics Andmentioning
confidence: 99%