ABSTRACT

“Central Europe” is a vague and ambiguous term, more to do with outlook and a state of mind than with a firmly defined geographical region. In the immediate aftermath of the collapse of the Iron Curtain, Central Europeans considered themselves to be culturally part of the West, which had been politically handicapped by the Eastern Soviet bloc. More recently, and with European Union membership, Central Europeans are increasingly thinking of themselves as politically part of the West, but culturally part of the East. This book, with contributions from a large number of scholars from the region, explores the concept of “Central Europe” and a number of other political concepts from an openly Central European perspective. It considers a wide range of issues including politics, nationalism, democracy, and the impact of culture, art and history. Overall, the book casts a great deal of light on the complex nature of “Central Europe”.

chapter |22 pages

Making sense of Central Europe

Political concepts of the region

part I|43 pages

Positioning Central Europe

part II|31 pages

Orientalism

chapter 6|6 pages

Which way east?

A conceptual misunderstanding

chapter 7|5 pages

Problem of “Western” approach to the “East”

A need for more careful listening and better understanding

chapter 8|6 pages

Poland and the East

chapter 10|7 pages

On “East”, “Central” and “Eastern” Europe

Belarus and Central European politics of identity

part III|36 pages

Geopolitics

chapter 11|6 pages

Regional geopolitics perspective of contemporary Poland

Same or different as other V4 countries?

chapter 13|4 pages

Towards a sustainable Visegrad

Some reflections on the future role of Central Europe in the EU

chapter 14|8 pages

Popular geopolitics

Understanding the Central European space in the Czech Republic

chapter 15|8 pages

Regional geopolitics

The case of Hungary

part IV|83 pages

Nationalism

chapter 16|7 pages

Nation

Central European context

chapter 19|7 pages

My hero, your enemy

Competing national memory cultures and symbolic politics in Central Europe

chapter 23|11 pages

Nationalism as civil religion

The case of Hungary

chapter 24|6 pages

Czech Republic

Dream to be nationalistic

chapter 25|7 pages

Historical consciousness

Czech and Slovak examples 1

part V|25 pages

Federalism

chapter 26|8 pages

No federation without separation

István Bibó about the prerequisites of regional and European integration

part VI|34 pages

Liberalism

chapter 29|9 pages

Liberalism in the Czech lands

Between nationalism and party marginality 1

chapter 30|8 pages

A fall of liberalism foretold?

Liberal politics in Hungary at the turn of two centuries

chapter 31|9 pages

Liberalism in Poland

Past experiences – present challenges

part VII|38 pages

Civil society

chapter 36|9 pages

Civil society as a jargon

Central European experience of civic activity after 1989

part VIII|39 pages

Participatory democracy

chapter 37|7 pages

Participatory democracy in Hungary

Out of practice due to lack of interest

chapter 40|6 pages

Too many actors reshape the plot

Why the rise of participatory democracy undermines the old ideological framework

part X|34 pages

Lustration

chapter 44|10 pages

Lustration

Ukrainian case

chapter 45|9 pages

Lustration in Poland

chapter 46|7 pages

Lustration in Slovakia

chapter 47|6 pages

Lustration in Czech Politics

part XI|33 pages

Power

chapter 48|8 pages

The Kundera paradox

Dying for Ukraine and EUrope? What the Ukraine crisis can tell us about European power

chapter 49|6 pages

Polish power

Potentia and its limits

chapter 50|7 pages

Power and the liberal conscience 1

Context of Central Eastern Europe

part XII|28 pages

Solidarity

chapter 53|7 pages

“Round table” talks as a conflict resolution tool

The Central and Eastern European experience

chapter 54|7 pages

Between anti-politics and post-politics

A history of the idea of solidarity

chapter 55|4 pages

Solidarity by decree

A view from Hungary

part XIV|32 pages

Cities

chapter 62|5 pages

Five tales of a city

Dysfunction and potential in a Central European capital

part XV|35 pages

Languages of art

chapter 64|8 pages

Languages of art in Central Europe

Participation, recognition, identity

chapter 66|10 pages

Visualizing, mocking and enacting

Vocabularies of Eastern European artistic activism