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The struggle over 1989. The rise and contestation of eastern European populism
-
Bogdan C. Iacob
, James Mark and Tobias Rupprecht
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Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter I
- Contents V
- Acknowledgements IX
- Introduction. The legacy of division: East and West after 1989 1
- Staring through the mocking glass: Three misperceptions of the East-West divide since 1989 11
- Back to Cold War and beyond 20
- The price of unity The transformation of Germany and east central Europe after 1989 30
- Thirty years on: Germany’s unfinished unity 48
- This mess of troubled times 59
- The mythology of the East-West divide 70
- Anxious Europe 76
- ‘But this is the world we live in’ Corruption, everyday managing, and civic mobilization in post-socialist Romania 84
- The end of the liberal world as we know it? Two walls in 1989 97
- Wests, East-Wests, and divides 104
- The Great Substitution 111
- The struggle over 1989. The rise and contestation of eastern European populism 123
- Beyond anti-democratic temptation 134
- Dissidence – doubt – creativity: Revisiting 1983 144
- Gendering dissent: Human rights, gender history and the road to 1989 154
- Creating feminism in the shadow of male heroes That other story of 1989 177
- Legacies of 1989 for dissent today 187
- Of hopes and ends: Czech transformations after 1989 209
- Just because the map says so, doesn’t mean it’s true: Thirty years after 1989, from an island perspective 219
- The East in you never leaves 227
- Freedom of movement: A European dialectic 232
- ‘The Romanians are coming’ Emerging divisions and enduring misperceptions in contemporary Europe 241
- The two faces of European disillusionment: An end to myths about the West and the East 254
- Go East! 264
- ‘The future was next to you’ An interview with Ivan Krastev on ’89 and the end of liberal hegemony 275
- ‘The distorting mirror’ A conversation between Igor Pomerantsev and Peter Pomerantsev 291
- Bibliography 298
- List of Contributors 316
- Index 329
Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter I
- Contents V
- Acknowledgements IX
- Introduction. The legacy of division: East and West after 1989 1
- Staring through the mocking glass: Three misperceptions of the East-West divide since 1989 11
- Back to Cold War and beyond 20
- The price of unity The transformation of Germany and east central Europe after 1989 30
- Thirty years on: Germany’s unfinished unity 48
- This mess of troubled times 59
- The mythology of the East-West divide 70
- Anxious Europe 76
- ‘But this is the world we live in’ Corruption, everyday managing, and civic mobilization in post-socialist Romania 84
- The end of the liberal world as we know it? Two walls in 1989 97
- Wests, East-Wests, and divides 104
- The Great Substitution 111
- The struggle over 1989. The rise and contestation of eastern European populism 123
- Beyond anti-democratic temptation 134
- Dissidence – doubt – creativity: Revisiting 1983 144
- Gendering dissent: Human rights, gender history and the road to 1989 154
- Creating feminism in the shadow of male heroes That other story of 1989 177
- Legacies of 1989 for dissent today 187
- Of hopes and ends: Czech transformations after 1989 209
- Just because the map says so, doesn’t mean it’s true: Thirty years after 1989, from an island perspective 219
- The East in you never leaves 227
- Freedom of movement: A European dialectic 232
- ‘The Romanians are coming’ Emerging divisions and enduring misperceptions in contemporary Europe 241
- The two faces of European disillusionment: An end to myths about the West and the East 254
- Go East! 264
- ‘The future was next to you’ An interview with Ivan Krastev on ’89 and the end of liberal hegemony 275
- ‘The distorting mirror’ A conversation between Igor Pomerantsev and Peter Pomerantsev 291
- Bibliography 298
- List of Contributors 316
- Index 329