20 years after the collapse of communism : expectations, achievements and disillusions of 1989

著者

    • Hayoz, Nicolas
    • Jesień, Leszek
    • Koleva, Daniela

書誌事項

20 years after the collapse of communism : expectations, achievements and disillusions of 1989

Nicolas Hayoz, Leszek Jesień, Daniela Koleva (eds)

(Interdisciplinary studies on Central and Eastern Europe, v. 9)

Peter Lang, c2011

タイトル別名

Twenty years after the collapse of communism

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注記

Includes bibliograhical references

内容説明・目次

内容説明

The volume is an attempt to assess the meanings of 1989, in particular the multiple transformation processes and their effects in Eastern Europe. Obviously, the realities of the post-communist transformations have not met the expectations. Were the expectations too high? Did democratic institutions prove incompatible with local cultures? Was their implementation too fast to correspond to a genuine development of democratic culture? Whatever the reasons, the road to democracy has turned out to be steeper and the communist legacy heavier than expected. The authors of this volume seek to comprehend the intricacies of various aspects of the post-communist transition; looking at a broad array of countries that have followed different paths. The studies combine methods of different disciplines. 'Insider' perspectives are juxtaposed with external assessments. This comparative and problem based approach brings into focus the ambiguities of the unfinished transformations as well as their broader cultural contexts: the politics of history and the battles for new memory, the re-signification of past and present, and the problematic transformation of homo sovieticus into an autonomous and responsive subject.

目次

Contents: Nicolas Hayoz/Daniela Koleva/Leszek Jesien: Introduction: Paths of Ambiguous Transformation after 20 Years - Leszek Jesien: A Sketch on Europeanization with the EU in Focus: Poland 1989-2004-2009 - Zhidas Daskalovski: The Influence of EU Conditionality and Europeanization on the Consolidation of Macedonia - Blagovesta Cholova/Daniel Bochsler: From Big Political Change to Permanent Change of Governments. The Logic of 20 Years of Political Party Competition in Central and Eastern Europe - Nicole Gallina/Nicolas Hayoz: Beyond Democracy: The Relevance of Informal Power in Eastern Europe - Valentina Dimitrova-Grajzl: Trust, Path Dependence and Historical Legacy: The Second Decade after Transition - Arben Hajrullahu: The Missing 'Functional Elite' and the Challenge of Democratization - Mentor Agani/Remzije Istrefi: The Promise of 1989 - Kosovo's Lost Treasure - Benedikt Harzl: Nationalism, Democracy and Independence Revisited: The Cases of Kosovo and Abkhazia - Ghia Nodia: External (F)actors in Democratization: Lessons From the Georgian Experience - Giga Zedania: Societal Values in Georgia: Twenty Years Later - Christian Giordano: Mythologies of Postsocialism: The Legends of Revolution and Transition Twenty Years after the Fall of the Berlin Wall - Irina Novikova: Baltic Lieux de memoire of the 1990s to Early 2000s: Nostalgia, Trauma, Change - Tomas Kavaliauskas: Different Meanings of May 9th, Victory Day over Nazi Germany for Russia and the Baltic States - Stefan Dietrich: (Re)writing History in the 1990s: Croatia and World War II Politics of Remembrance in Croatia - from the 1990s to the Present Day - Andriy Portnov: Post-Soviet Ukraine and Belarus Dealing with "The Great Patriotic War" - Christophe von Werdt: "Cossacks into State-Builders" - Constructing Historical "Cossack-Statehood"in Ukraine: A Case Study - Krzysztof Brzechczyn: The Forgotten Legacy of Solidarnosc and Lost Opportunities to Build a Democratic Capitalist System Following the Fall of Communism in Poland - Daniela Koleva: Hope for the Past? Postsocialist Nostalgia 20 Years Later - Martin Pogacar: Traces of Yugoslavia: Yuniverse Beyond Nostalgia - Jan Culik: Current Czech Opinion of the pre-1989 and post-1989 Regimes: Disillusionment with Politics, Regardless of Party Political Allegiances - Jasmina Husanovic: Recasting Transitions after The Fall: Global Governance of Trauma and the Politics of Life in Bosnia and Herzegovina - Francois Ruegg: High Heels and Blue Jeans. What Are the Visible Signs of Democracy? - Nenad Miscevic: Nation, Border and Territory - Reflecting on Croatian Experiences - Jan Wolenski: From Controlled Liberalism to Real Pluralism. The Development of Philosophy in Poland at the End of the Communist Era - Maciej Urbanowski: Between a Valley of Joy and a Valley of Nothingness. The Year 1989 and Polish Literature - Ioana Both: How to Tell the Truth with Words: Romanian Post-Communist Literature Negotiating Memories: Romanian Literature Reloaded - Michael Muller: Essay and Travelogue. Two Literary Genres that Have Been Rediscovered during the Debate on the Yugoslavian Collapse - Judit Friedrich: Blaming versus Healing: Facing Communist Informers of the Past, and a Literary Example in Peter Esterhazy's Revised Edition - Alexander Kiossev: Crimes Against Everyday Life, or On the Patho-Anthropology of Socialism.

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