ABSTRACT

The book explores the intellectual history of Bulgaria between the 1960s and the 1980s at the intersections of the country's social and political history. Based on case studies, the research delves into three areas: the control and pressure mechanisms used on science and the university; the clash of ideas while performing the formal and hidden functions of academia in a communist regime setting; the processes whereby research and academia acquire a relative autonomy and alternative academic communities are being formed amidst the eroding ideological legitimacy of the regime.

Centred on the concept of the "incident", this setup allowed us to eschew the narratives around the role of the dissidents or "freedom as a gift" and interpret society's transformation as the outcome of intersecting and overlaying sectoral events, which gathered strength down the years and lay the ground for the eruption labelled here as the "Big Event of 1989".

chapter |8 pages

Introduction

On this book’s nature and objectives

chapter 2|20 pages

The Zhelyu Zhelev case

Sinning against faith and the party Themis

chapter |5 pages

Theoretical outcomes (1)

A sense of community awakens. Small groups of civic engagement

chapter 3|18 pages

The Ivan Slavov case

Between the threat of social exclusion and the moral sanction of the group

chapter |4 pages

Theoretical outcomes (2)

On actions committed under duress and amidst severe freedom shortage

chapter 4|28 pages

The Nikolay Genchev case

Against historiography as the chambermaid of politics or life in two parallel worlds

chapter 5|29 pages

The Zhelyu Zhelev case (continued)

Between truth and authority – creation of “the revisionists”

chapter |9 pages

Theoretical outcomes (3)

“Letters to the Chief” as a genre. Social communication in a closed, overcentralised society

chapter 6|51 pages

The Assen Ignatov case

Beyond the limits of the officially regulated knowledge. Philosophy as a way to deliberate on the human condition

chapter |3 pages

Theoretical outcomes (4)

The correlation between coercion and free action in a totalitarian state

chapter 7|22 pages

The Isak Passy case

The separation of political and intellectual power. Theory and information breakthrough

chapter |7 pages

Theoretical outcomes (5)

Academic paradigm and community amid the one-party dictatorship

chapter 8|19 pages

From Zhelyu Zhelev case to the case of “fascism”

Anatomy of a chain of incidents

chapter 9|27 pages

The Dobrin Spassov case

A clash between the rejection of totalitarian practices and the commitment to social utopia

chapter 10|32 pages

The Ilcho Dimitrov case

In search of a win-win game within the system: The public communications craftsman

chapter |6 pages

Theoretical outcomes (6)

Specifics of social criticism in totalitarian society. Social criticism and social change

chapter |12 pages

Conclusion: From the big event to the incidents

A reconstruction of the event(ual) identity of historical change