Rensmann, Lars (6. 9. 2004). „10 - Collective Guilt, National Identity, and Political Processes in Contemporary Germany”. Ур.: Nyla R. Branscombe; Bertjan Doosje. Collective Guilt: International Perspectives. Studies in emotion and social interaction. Cambridge University Press. стр. 169—190. ISBN978-0-521-52083-6. OCLC783204942. doi:10.1017/CBO9781139106931.012. „The Holocaust against the Jews of Europe is internationally recognized as a modern genocide that changed the world. It has become a universal moral paradigm in democratic societies and continues to have a significant impact on world politics and international law. Its remembrance provides an ethical background for democratic decision-making and its institutionalization today. In Germany, the memory and legacy of this past has special implications. The much-lamented burden of guilt has been influential in post-Holocaust German society; Germany's national guilt has deeply affected both collective memory and national identity since the end of the war. ... Germany, therefore, provides a central arena for analyzing the impact of collective guilt.”CS1 одржавање: Формат датума (веза)
Rensmann, Lars (6. 9. 2004). „10 - Collective Guilt, National Identity, and Political Processes in Contemporary Germany”. Ур.: Nyla R. Branscombe; Bertjan Doosje. Collective Guilt: International Perspectives. Studies in emotion and social interaction. Cambridge University Press. стр. 169—190. ISBN978-0-521-52083-6. OCLC783204942. doi:10.1017/CBO9781139106931.012. „The Holocaust against the Jews of Europe is internationally recognized as a modern genocide that changed the world. It has become a universal moral paradigm in democratic societies and continues to have a significant impact on world politics and international law. Its remembrance provides an ethical background for democratic decision-making and its institutionalization today. In Germany, the memory and legacy of this past has special implications. The much-lamented burden of guilt has been influential in post-Holocaust German society; Germany's national guilt has deeply affected both collective memory and national identity since the end of the war. ... Germany, therefore, provides a central arena for analyzing the impact of collective guilt.”CS1 одржавање: Формат датума (веза)
doi.org
Rensmann, Lars (6. 9. 2004). „10 - Collective Guilt, National Identity, and Political Processes in Contemporary Germany”. Ур.: Nyla R. Branscombe; Bertjan Doosje. Collective Guilt: International Perspectives. Studies in emotion and social interaction. Cambridge University Press. стр. 169—190. ISBN978-0-521-52083-6. OCLC783204942. doi:10.1017/CBO9781139106931.012. „The Holocaust against the Jews of Europe is internationally recognized as a modern genocide that changed the world. It has become a universal moral paradigm in democratic societies and continues to have a significant impact on world politics and international law. Its remembrance provides an ethical background for democratic decision-making and its institutionalization today. In Germany, the memory and legacy of this past has special implications. The much-lamented burden of guilt has been influential in post-Holocaust German society; Germany's national guilt has deeply affected both collective memory and national identity since the end of the war. ... Germany, therefore, provides a central arena for analyzing the impact of collective guilt.”CS1 одржавање: Формат датума (веза)
Rensmann, Lars (6. 9. 2004). „10 - Collective Guilt, National Identity, and Political Processes in Contemporary Germany”. Ур.: Nyla R. Branscombe; Bertjan Doosje. Collective Guilt: International Perspectives. Studies in emotion and social interaction. Cambridge University Press. стр. 169—190. ISBN978-0-521-52083-6. OCLC783204942. doi:10.1017/CBO9781139106931.012. „The Holocaust against the Jews of Europe is internationally recognized as a modern genocide that changed the world. It has become a universal moral paradigm in democratic societies and continues to have a significant impact on world politics and international law. Its remembrance provides an ethical background for democratic decision-making and its institutionalization today. In Germany, the memory and legacy of this past has special implications. The much-lamented burden of guilt has been influential in post-Holocaust German society; Germany's national guilt has deeply affected both collective memory and national identity since the end of the war. ... Germany, therefore, provides a central arena for analyzing the impact of collective guilt.”CS1 одржавање: Формат датума (веза)