ABSTRACT

This book is not about the events of 1989, but about 1989 as a world event. Starting with the fall of the Berlin Wall and the collapse of the Soviet bloc it examines the historical significance and the world brought about by 1989.

When the Cold War ended in Europe it ushered in a world in which the international agenda is set outside Europe, in America or Asia. The book critically examines and moves beyond some of the conveniently simple paradigms proposed in the nineties, by leading political scientists such as Fukuyama and Huntington, to show how the events of 1989 meant different things to different parties. This was an anti-utopian revolution, a symbol of the possibility of non-violent transitions to democracy, which raised the hopes of world-wide democratic changes. Contributors show how 1989 can be seen as the founding moment of a globalized world, but equal attention should be given to the dispersion of its meanings and the exhaustion of some of its main trends associated with the post-1989 era. Europe was reunited, yet it is in crisis. Twenty years on, global markets have brought about a global financial crisis. The fall of the Berlin Wall was celebrated as the advent of free movement in a world without borders. Now however, we can see that new borders, walls, fences have since been built.

With an introductory essay by Vaclav Havel, 1989 as a Political World Event will be of interest to scholars of European Politics and International Relations.

part I|38 pages

The meanings and legacies of 1989

chapter 3|9 pages

Writing 1989

A world narrative?

chapter 4|9 pages

1989

A philosophy of immediacy

part II|84 pages

Re-inventing democracy and its discontents

chapter 5|11 pages

Democracy and dissatisfaction *

chapter 8|22 pages

Civil society

From myth to reality

chapter 9|10 pages

‘Tropical democracy'

chapter 10|16 pages

The Arab four seasons

When an excess of religion leads to political secularization

part III|55 pages

Varieties of capitalism in the age of globalization

part IV|59 pages

Between global governance and new power rivalries

chapter 15|16 pages

Russia and the quest for lost power

chapter 16|11 pages

China and the end of socialism in Europe

A godsend for the Beijing Communists