ABSTRACT

Throughout Eastern Europe, the unexpected and irrevocable fall of communism that began in the late 1980s presented enormous challenges in the spheres of politics and society, as well as at the level of individual experience. Excitement, uncertainty, and fear predicated the shaping of a new order, the outcome of which was anything but predetermined.

Recent studies have focused on the ambivalent impact of capitalism. Yet, at the time, parliamentary democracy had equally few traditions to return to, and membership in the European Union was a distant dream at best. Nowadays, as new threats arise, Europe’s current political crises prompt us to reconsider how liberal democracy in Eastern Europe came about in the first place.

This book undertakes an analysis of the year 1990 in several countries throughout Europe to consider the role of uncertainty and change in shaping political nations.

chapter 1|11 pages

Groping in the dark

Expectations and predictions, 1988–1991

chapter 3|18 pages

Poland and the collapse of the patron in 1989–90

As seen from the Polish embassy in Moscow

chapter 4|30 pages

Tea with the primate

At the roots of political conflict in Poland

chapter 5|23 pages

Czechoslovakia’s year of decision

From the socialist revolution of 1989 to the ‘real’ revolution of 1990

chapter 6|14 pages

Talkin’ ’bout a revolution

On the social memory of 1989 in Hungary

chapter 7|25 pages

A transition to what and whose democracy?

1990 in Bulgaria and Romania

chapter 9|18 pages

1990

Building democracy in Yugoslavia and the danger of war

chapter 10|20 pages

Transforming industry

On the corporate origins of post-socialist nostalgia in Poland

chapter 12|33 pages

The party is over

The identities and biographies of Czechoslovak and East German (post) communists in the year 1990