Marking the thirtieth anniversary of the revolutions of 1989, this original and wide-ranging study places the transformation of Eastern Europe in a global context, providing new perspectives on the relationship between globalisation and the collapse of communism in the late twentieth century, and the rise of populism in the twenty-first.
Marking the thirtieth anniversary of the revolutions of 1989, this original and wide-ranging study places the transformation of Eastern Europe in a global context, providing new perspectives on the relationship between globalisation and the collapse of communism in the late twentieth century, and the rise of populism in the twenty-first.Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
James Mark is Professor of History at the University of Exeter. He is the author of The Unfinished Revolution: Making Sense of the Communist Past in Central-Eastern Europe (2010), which was nominated for the Longman History Today Book Prize 2011 and selected as one of the 'best books of 2011' by Foreign Affairs. He is co-author of Europe's 1968: Voices of Revolt (2013) and co-editor of Secret Agents and the Memory of Everyday Collaboration in Communist Eastern Europe (2017) and Alternative Encounters: Eastern Europe and the Postcolonial World (forthcoming).
Inhaltsangabe
Acknowledgements Introduction 0.1 Going global 0.2 The long transition and the making of transitional elites in global perspective 0.3 A global history of the other '1989s' 0.4 The end of the '1989' era? 1. Globalisation 1.1 From socialist internationalism to capitalist globalisation 1.2 Debt and ideological re-orientation 1.3 The choice of 'neoliberal' globalisation 1.4 Authoritarian transformations? 1.5 Transformation from within 1.6 Conclusion 2. Democratisation 2.1 Reforming elites 2.2 Opposition from the local to the global and back 2.3 Alternatives to '1989': authoritarianism and violence 2.4 Disciplining transition and democratic peace 3. Europeanisation 3.1 The early Cold War: a divided Europe 3.2 Helsinki - re-bordering Europe? 3.3 An anti-colonial Europe: critiquing Helsinki 3.4 A prehistory of Fortress Europe: civilisational bordering in late socialism 3.5 Eastern Europe, a buffer against Islam? 3.6 After 1989: 'Fortress Europe'? 3.7 Conclusion 4. Self-determination 4.1 The rise of anti-colonial self-determination 4.2 The Soviet withdrawal 4.3 Peace or violence 4.4 Reverberations of Eastern European self-determination 4.5 Conclusion 5. Reverberations 5.1 1989 as a new global script 5.2 Instrumentalising 1989: the West and new forms of political conditionality 5.3 'Taming' the left 5.4 Interventionism and the '1989' myth 5.5 Eastern Europeans and the export of the revolutionary idea 5.6 From Cuba to China: rejecting '1989' 5.7 Conclusion 6. A world without '1989' 6.1 Towards the West? Ambiguous convergence 6.2 Who is the true Europe? The turn to divergence 6.3 Beyond the EU: post-socialist global trajectories 6.4 Conclusion.
Acknowledgements Introduction 0.1 Going global 0.2 The long transition and the making of transitional elites in global perspective 0.3 A global history of the other '1989s' 0.4 The end of the '1989' era? 1. Globalisation 1.1 From socialist internationalism to capitalist globalisation 1.2 Debt and ideological re-orientation 1.3 The choice of 'neoliberal' globalisation 1.4 Authoritarian transformations? 1.5 Transformation from within 1.6 Conclusion 2. Democratisation 2.1 Reforming elites 2.2 Opposition from the local to the global and back 2.3 Alternatives to '1989': authoritarianism and violence 2.4 Disciplining transition and democratic peace 3. Europeanisation 3.1 The early Cold War: a divided Europe 3.2 Helsinki - re-bordering Europe? 3.3 An anti-colonial Europe: critiquing Helsinki 3.4 A prehistory of Fortress Europe: civilisational bordering in late socialism 3.5 Eastern Europe, a buffer against Islam? 3.6 After 1989: 'Fortress Europe'? 3.7 Conclusion 4. Self-determination 4.1 The rise of anti-colonial self-determination 4.2 The Soviet withdrawal 4.3 Peace or violence 4.4 Reverberations of Eastern European self-determination 4.5 Conclusion 5. Reverberations 5.1 1989 as a new global script 5.2 Instrumentalising 1989: the West and new forms of political conditionality 5.3 'Taming' the left 5.4 Interventionism and the '1989' myth 5.5 Eastern Europeans and the export of the revolutionary idea 5.6 From Cuba to China: rejecting '1989' 5.7 Conclusion 6. A world without '1989' 6.1 Towards the West? Ambiguous convergence 6.2 Who is the true Europe? The turn to divergence 6.3 Beyond the EU: post-socialist global trajectories 6.4 Conclusion.
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