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Narratives and Normativity: Totalitarianism and Narrative Change in the European Legal Tradition after World War II
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 23 April 2019
Abstract
After WWII, a new form of Europeanism emerged in legal history that gained momentum from European unification. This article explores the emergence of this new narrative as part of the process of exile from totalitarianism and its connection with the reestablishment of the European intellectual and political order after the war. The purpose is to explore the parallel afterwar processes of narrative and normative change and the influences and connections between them. It focuses on a specific historical case, the turn toward Europe, its legal heritage and human rights in the post-war era writing of legal history, especially in the writings of Paul Koschaker, Franz Wieacker, and Helmut Coing, and its linkages to the simultaneous process of European integration. It explores a new argument about the interlinkage between narrativity and normativity as cognitive processes that rely on the creation and sustaining of belief, and the ideas of legitimacy and identity construction.
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- Original Article
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- Copyright © the American Society for Legal History, Inc. 2019
Footnotes
A source of funding has been added to the acknowledgments. An addendum detailing this change has also been published (doi:10.1017/S0738248019000555).
He thanks the members of the research project “Reinventing the Foundations of European Legal Culture 1934–1964”—Drs. Heta Björklund, Magdalena Kmak, Tommaso Beggio, Ville Erkkilä, and Jacob Giltai—for their advice and help. The research leading to these results has received funding from the European Research Council (ERC) under the European Union's Seventh Framework Programme (FP7/2007-2013)/ERC grant agreement no. 313100. This research has also been supported by the Academy of Finland funded Centre of Excellence in Law, Identity and the European Narratives, funding decision number 312154.
References
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