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Full Description
The term "crisis," with its complex history, has emerged as one of the pivotal notions of political modernity. As such, reconstructing the ways the discourse of crisis functioned in various contexts and historical moments gives us a unique insight not only into a series of conceptual transformations, but also into the underlying logic of key political and intellectual controversies of the last two centuries. Studying the ways crisis was experienced, conceptualized, and negotiated can contribute to the understanding of how various visions of time and history shape political thinking and, conversely, how political and social reconfigurations frame our assumptions about temporality and spatiality.
A historical region wedged in between various competing imperial centers, East Central Europe has been an area often associated with crisis phenomena by both internal and external observers. Seeking to employ the regional gaze as a vantage point to reflect on issues which are relevant well beyond those countries between the Baltic and the Adriatic, this project is also in dialogue with a number of recent transnational attempts to rethink political and intellectual history with regard to the recurrent epistemological frames that structure the political and cultural debate.
This book will thus be useful both for researchers, from the field of conceptual history and numerous adjacent fields, and graduate university students alike.
Contents
Introduction
Part I. Interwar Crises of Body and Soul
Balázs Trencsényi: "Crisis without Catharsis? Crisis Discourses and the Problem of Political Modernity in Interwar East Central Europe"
Johannes Bent and Liisi Keedus: "Contesting German 'Crisis Literature': Oswald Spengler in Interwar Hungarian and Romanian Reviews
Vilius Kubekas: "Confronting the Spiritual Crisis: The Philosophical and Political Reorientation of Lithuanian Catholicism in the mid-1930s"
Suzana Vuljević: "Order Amid Chaos: The Crisis of Spirit and a Panoply of Pan-Balkan Solutions in Interwar Europe"
Lucija Balikić: "Coming of Age with Crisis: Discourses on the 'National Body' in Youth Organizations of Interwar Yugoslavia and Hungary"
Kristina Andělová and Isidora Grubački: "Crises of Feminism and Democracy in the Interwar Period. Yugoslav and Czechoslovak Entanglements"
Katherine Lebow: "Bodies in Crisis: Women and Unemployment in Polish Sociological Research of the 1930s"
Part II. Crises of Transition To and From Socialism
Olga Byrska: "Crisis, Revolution, Reconstruction? Early Postwar Debates on Social and Political Transformation in Poland"
Julius Horvath: "Market Crisis and National Happiness: A Study of the Slovak and Czech Responses to Crisis in the Twentieth Century"
Una Blagojević: "The Cunning of Crisis and Yugoslav Marxist Humanism"
Stevo Đurašković: "Predrag Matvejević: The Crisis of Socialist Yugoslavia as a Crisis of Yugoslav Identity"
Marko Zajc: "The Nova revija Magazine's 1986 Survey on the Yugoslav crisis"
Benedek Pál: "'We all talk about crisis, but what do we mean by crisis?' Polish and Hungarian Intellectuals Negotiating the Crisis of State Socialism in the First Half of the 1980s"
Viola Lászlófi: "The Crisis of Biopolitics or Biopoliticizing the Crisis? Discourses on the Problems of Socialist Healthcare in Late Socialist Hungary"
Martin Babička: "Discourses of Moral and Ecological Crisis in Czech Postsocialist Transformation"
Tjaša Konovšek: "Crisis as Political Criticism: Slovenia, Post-communism, and the Conservative Turn"