Südosteuropa. Journal of Politics and Society 64 (2016), 3

Titel der Ausgabe 
Südosteuropa. Journal of Politics and Society 64 (2016), 3
Weiterer Titel 
Living After the Fall. Contingent Biographies in the Postsocialist Space

Erschienen
München 2016: Oldenbourg Verlag
Erscheint 
viermal jährlich
Anzahl Seiten
160 S.
Preis
Abonnement € 57,00

 

Kontakt

Institution
Südosteuropa. Journal of Politics and Society
Land
Deutschland
c/o
Dr. Sabine Rutar Leibniz-Institut für Ost- und Südosteuropaforschung Landshuter Straße 4 93047 Regensburg
Von
Rutar, Sabine

Dear colleagues,

issue 3, 2016, of "Suedosteuropa. Journal of Politics and Society" has just been published. Cristofer Scarboro (King’s College in Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania) is guest editor of the thematic section „Living after the Fall. Contingent Biographies in Postsocialist Space“. Diana Georgescu (London) investigates the role of public intellectuals in Romania, whose autobiographic writings articulate hegemonic representations of the socialist past. Caterina Preda (Bucharest) introduces „Project 1990“ - on the empty pedestal of the former statue of Lenin in Bucharest artists installed twenty temporary interpretations of the socialist past. Fedja Buric (Louisville, Kentucky) relies on his own diary, kept as a 14-year-old between 1993 and 1994, in an effort to study how the violent breakup of Yugoslavia impacted identities of ordinary people. Daniela Koleva (Sofia) explores the narrative strategies that her interviewees, from what she calls the „first socialist generation“ born in the 1920 and 1930s, adopted to let them present their lives as meaningfully seamless and coherent, despite the change in frame of reference.

The issue features a Dossier motivated by recent events: „Europe(an) Matters“. Erhard Busek (Vienna), former special coordinator of the Stability Pact for Southeastern Europe, assesses the present European crises—the refugee crisis, the financial crisis, the Greek crisis, the Ukrainian crisis, the Brexit crisis—from a Southeast European perspective, and from the perspective of one who has worked substantively toward the stabilization of the postwar societies of the successor states of Yugoslavia in the 2000s. John Breuilly (London) outlines how the Brexit referendum came about, provides crucial background information, and analyses its results, focusing on the UK/EU relationship, the internal constitutional crisis the Brexit vote has created, and the dangers these pose for (further) de-stabilisation both of Britain and Europe. The two commentaries are completed by a public debate organized in Berlin on the eve of the Brexit referendum, in which various experts on Southeast European history and politics discussed the effects of the current crises on Europe’s southeastern periphery.

In the open section, Iris Meder takes the reader on an illustrated tour of recent publications and exhibitions on the architecture of socialist modernity in Yugoslavia, offering the journal’s first „Photographic Review“.

The journal is available in print from De Gruyter Oldenbourg and online at http://www.degruyter.com/view/j/soeu.2016.64.issue-3/issue-files/soeu.2016.64.issue-3.xml?rskey=clBDAy. The book reviews are available in open access at recensio.net.

Best regards,
Sabine Rutar

Inhaltsverzeichnis

CONTENT

*FOCUS: LIVING AFTER THE FALL.
CONTINGENT BIOGRAPHIES IN POSTSOCIALIST SPACE*

Cristofer Scarboro: Living after the Fall. Contingent Biographies in Postsocialist Space
277–283

Diana Georgescu: Between Trauma and Nostalgia. The Intellectual Ethos and Generational Dynamics of Memory in Postsocialist Romania
284–306

Caterina Preda: ‘Project 1990’ as an Anti-Monument in Bucharest and the Aestheticisation of Memory
307–324

Fedja Buric: Confessions of a ‘Mixed Marriage Child’. Diary in the Study of Yugoslavia’s Breakup
325–343

Daniela Koleva: Negotiating Socialist Lives after the Fall. Narrative Resources and Strategies of the First Socialist Generation in Bulgaria
344–364

DOSSIER: EUROPE(AN) MATTERS

Erhard Busek: Europe on the Move. A Commentary
365–371

John Breuilly: Brexit and Europe. A Commentary
372–380

Beyond the ‘Balkan Route’, or Why Southeastern Europe Remains a Core Issue for Europe. A Discussion among Andrea Despot, Hannes Grandits, Wolfgang Höpken, Dušan Reljić, Gabriella Schubert, and Sevasti Trubeta
381–395

PHOTOGRAPHIC REVIEW

Iris Meder: New Literature on the Architecture of Socialist Modernity in Yugoslavia
396–418

BOOK REVIEWS

Ivo Komšić, The Survived Country. Dividing Bosnia and Herzegovina. Who, When, Where (Nicolas Moll)
419–421

Arolda Elbasani / Olivier Roy, eds, The Revival of Islam in the Balkans. From Identity to Religiosity (Xavier Bougarel)
421–422

Stefan Dorondel, Disrupted Landscapes. State, Peasants and the Politics of Land in Postsocialist Romania (Wim van Meurs)
423–424

Costas Simitis, The European Debt Crisis. The Greek Case (Geert Luteijn)
424–426

Tanja Zimmermann, Der Balkan zwischen Ost und West. Mediale Bilder und kulturpolitische Prägungen (Johanna Fiedler)
426–429

Martin Upchurch / Darko Marinković, Workers and Revolution in Serbia. From Tito to Milošević (Sabine Rutar)
429–432

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