ABSTRACT

Why does 1968 matter today? The authors of this volume believe that it is a crucial point of reference for current developments, especially the ‘illiberal turn’ both in Europe and America. If we want to understand it, we need to look back into 1968 – the year that founded the cultural and political order of today’s world.

The book consists of the following four sections: '1968 and transnationality', '1968 and the transformation of meanings', 'Artistic representations of 1968', and '1968 and the European contemporaity'. This is followed by an afterword from the significant keynote speaker at the conference Unsettled 1968: Origins – Myth – Impact in June 2018 in Tübingen, Germany: Irena Grudzinska-Gross, herself a Polish ‘68er’, reflects upon the conference and leaves remarks on her 50 years of engagement with what happened in 1968.

chapter 1|4 pages

1968

Myth and impact
ByAleksandra Konarzewska, Michał Przeperski

part I|2 pages

1968 and transnationality

chapter 2|17 pages

Worlds of Praxis

61968, intellectuals, and an island in the Yugoslav Adriatic
ByUna Blagojević

chapter 3|17 pages

‘The long 1968’ in Hungary and its legacy

ByAdrian-George Matus

chapter 4|16 pages

The anti-political vision

Post-1968 theories of dissent in Central Europe and beyond
BySzabolcs László

part II|2 pages

1968 and the transformation of meanings

chapter 5|21 pages

The sixties and the historian

59Eric Hobsbawm and Tony Judt 1
ByVictoria Harms

chapter 6|14 pages

In search of public sphere pluralism in 1960s West Germany

ByAdrian Chubb

chapter 7|17 pages

The events of 1968 in the Eastern Bloc and the Italian Left

ByBartosz Gromko

part III|2 pages

Artistic representations of 1968

chapter 8|16 pages

Behind the scenes of broadcasting March 1968

113Radio Free Europe and its internal disputes over the defector Henryk Grynberg
ByAnna Nakai

chapter 9|17 pages

Toxic community

Incorporated scripts, bodily resistance: immunitarian processes in the comedy Rejs
ByNina Seiler

chapter 10|15 pages

Carnival and utopia

Juraj Jakubisko’s films and the experience of 1968
ByMarie Schwarz

part IV|2 pages

1968 and the European contemporaneity

chapter 11|25 pages

The myths of March ’68

162Conflicts of memory in contemporary Poland
ByAndrzej Czyżewski

chapter 12|20 pages

The ‘Prague Spring’

From Cultural Memory to Personal Trauma?
ByDmitry Bochkov

chapter 13|15 pages

Freedom from, or in socialism?

The Prague Spring and the trauma of the 1968 Warsaw Pact invasion in Slovak political discourse
ByDominik Želinský

chapter 14|3 pages

Final remarks

1968 again
ByIrena Grudzińska-Gross