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Full Description
This book delivers a compelling analysis of how Central and Eastern European nations work to reclaim their political and national identities after decades of communist rule. It reveals the historical, cultural and political factors that make nationalism particularly salient in the region, examining its various manifestations and far-reaching implications.
Filling a significant gap in current scholarship, the book positions nationalism as a driving force behind the region's political and territorial transformation and current challenges. In particular, it demonstrates how rising populism and authoritarian regression in the region can be connected to nationalism.
Contents
Introduction
1. Why is Post-communist Europe Different to Western Europe?
Part I: Nations in Flux
2. States, Nations and Citizens in Reconfigured Regions
3. 'Shrunken State': Nationalism as a Geopolitical Concept
4. In the Name of the Serbian Nation
Part II: Historical Revisionism
5. Revising Historical Memory: Russia, Ukraine, Fascism and Communism
6. Unusable Past and Remembering the Holocaust
7. Conclusion: 'New' Nationalism and Its Dilemmas



