Traces of Red: Urban Tourism and Everyday Communist Memory in Budapest, Prague, and Warsaw
Rose Joy Smith
No du8hr_v1, SocArXiv from Center for Open Science
Abstract:
This article explores how urban tourism in Budapest, Prague, and Warsaw curates, presents, and contextualises the communist past through depictions of everyday life in museums and walking tours. Utilising the framework of slow memory, the research shifts analytical attention from “eventful” and “sited” historical ruptures to the “non-event” nature of mundane routines and domestic objects. The study argues that these ordinary facets of life function as sedimented memories, gradually accruing through daily practice and shaping contemporary urban identities in ways that monumental history often overlooks. The analysis contrasts two distinct modes of memory representation: (1) museums, which provide structured, artefact-centric narratives that often frame history through institutionalised “routing points,” and (2) walking tours, which offer mobile, experiential engagements that transform the city itself into a living museum. Through a comparative qualitative study of sites, namely the Budapest Retro Interactive Museum, Prague’s Museum of Communism, and Warsaw’s Life Under Communism Museum, the research highlights a persistent tension between commercialised “retro-nostalgia” and critical, sustained reflection. Ultimately, the article demonstrates how these diverse tourism modalities navigate the boundaries between remembrance and commodification, revealing that the residues of the communist era remain deeply embedded in the social and architectural fabric of modern European capitals. By foregrounding the “ordinary” within historical discourse, the research provides a framework for understanding urban identity as a process of quiet sustenance, where history is integrated into the very texture of contemporary life.
Date: 2026-05-25
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Persistent link: https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:osf:socarx:du8hr_v1
DOI: 10.31219/osf.io/du8hr_v1
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