Fr. 95.00

The East-West Discourse - Symbolic Geography and its Consequences

English · Paperback / Softback

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Description

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Political actors from many different countries locate their home country as a unique transition point between "the East" and "the West". The terms "east" and "west" have become highly symbolic, yet also have a relative meaning, since every place is east of somewhere, and west of somewhere else. What gives this banal cliché such irresistible attraction? How does East-West symbolism interact with other symbolic geographies? This book examines East-West rhetoric in several different historical contexts, seeking to problematize its implicit assumptions and analyse its consequences, particularly in parts of Europe where political actors conflate local geography with symbolic "Easts" and "Wests".
The various contributions to the book provide an overview of East-West discourses in scholarly writing; trace the medieval origins of European East-West symbolism; and discuss East-West discourses in nineteenth-century Germany, interwar Poland, Yugoslavia and Transylvania, twentieth-century Finland, Turkey in the late Cold War and post-Communist Belarus.

List of contents

Contents: Alexander Maxwell: Introduction. Bridges and Bulwarks: A Historiographic Overview of East-West Discourses - Glyn Parry: Conceptions of the East: Medieval and Early Modern Europe - Florian Gassner: Becoming a Western Nation: German National Identity and the Image of Russia - Andrew Kier Wise: Russia as Poland's Civilizational "Other" - Vesna Drapac: Yugoslav Studies and the East-West Dichotomy - Sacha Davis: East-West Discourses in Transylvania: Transitional Erdély , German-Western Siebenbürgen or Latin-Western Ardeal ? - Christopher Browning/Marko Lehti: Geographic Centrality and Marginality: East, West and North in Finnish Symbolic Geography - Mehmet Dosemeci: How Turkey Became a Bridge between "East" and "West": The EEC and Turkey's Great Westernization Debate, 1960-1980 - Nelly Bekus: East, West or "In Between"? Three Post-Communist Concepts of the Belarusian Nation.

About the author










Alexander Maxwell completed his PhD in Madison, Wisconsin. In 2007, he joined the history programme at Victoria University in Wellington, New Zealand, where he directs the Antipodean East European Study Group. He is the author of Choosing Slovakia: Slavic Hungary, the Czechoslovak Language and Accidental Nationalism, and has translated into English Jan Kollár's Wechselseitigkeit. He has also published several articles on Hungary, Macedonia, Poland, Pan-Slavism, nationalism, linguistic politics and history pedagogy.

Product details

Assisted by Alexande Maxwell (Editor), Alexander Maxwell (Editor)
Publisher Peter Lang
 
Languages English
Product format Paperback / Softback
Released 31.03.2016
 
EAN 9783034301985
ISBN 978-3-0-3430198-5
No. of pages 237
Dimensions 150 mm x 13 mm x 225 mm
Weight 360 g
Series Nationalisms across the Globe
Nationalisms across the Globe
Subjects Humanities, art, music > History > 20th century (up to 1945)
Social sciences, law, business > Political science > Political science and political education

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