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Democracy and Myth in Russia and Eastern Europe Alexander Woll (University of Regensburg, Germany)

Democracy and Myth in Russia and Eastern Europe By Alexander Woll (University of Regensburg, Germany)

Democracy and Myth in Russia and Eastern Europe by Alexander Woll (University of Regensburg, Germany)


Summary

This book explores democracy and democratization in Eastern Europe, focusing on the influence of politically important literary and historical myths in pre-communist and communist Eastern Europe and Russia.

Democracy and Myth in Russia and Eastern Europe Summary

Democracy and Myth in Russia and Eastern Europe by Alexander Woll (University of Regensburg, Germany)

In the absence of democratic state institutions, eastern European countries were considered to possess only myths of democracy. Working on the premise that democracy is not only an institutional arrangement but also a civilisational project, this book argues that mythical narratives help understanding the emergence of democracy without democrats. Examining different national traditions as well as pre-communist and communist narratives, myths are seen as politically fabricated programmes of truth that form and sustain the political imagination. Appearing as cultural, literary, or historical resources, myths amount to ideology in narrative form, which actors use in political struggles for the sake of achieving social compliance and loyalty with the authority of new political forms. Drawing on a wide range of case studies including Ukraine, Russia, Poland, Hungary, and Czechoslovakia, this book argues that narratives about the past are not simply legacies of former regimes but have actively shaped representations and meanings of democracy in the region. Taking different theoretical and methodological approaches, the power of myth is explored for issues such as leadership, collective identity-formation, literary representation of heroic figures, cultural symbolism in performative art as well as on the constitution of legitimacy and civic identity in post-communist democracies.

About Alexander Woll (University of Regensburg, Germany)

Alexander Woll teaches Slavonic Studies at the University of Regensburg, where he is working as Assistant Professor. He is the author of Doubles. Mirror-writing, stone monument and usurpation (1999) and Jakub Deml. Life and Work. A Study in Middle European Literature (2006).

Harald Wydra teaches Politics at the University of Cambridge, where he is a Fellow of St Catharines College. He is the author of Continuities in Polands Permanent Transition (2001) and Communism and the Emergence of Democracy (2006).

Table of Contents

1. Introduction: Democracy and Myth in Russia and Eastern Europe Harald Wydra 2. Mythology and the Trickster: Interpreting Communism Agnes Horvath 3. The Non-Being of Communism and Myths of Democratisation Arpad Szakolczai 4. The Power of Second Reality: Communist Myths and Representations of Democracy Harald Wydra 5. Mazepa as a Symbolic Figure of Ukrainian Autonomy Thomas Grob 6. Misoteutonic Myths: Lopping Noses in Hussite Nationalism and Loves Sweet Cure Robert Pynsent 7. The Myth of the Dialogue of Myths: Russia and Europe Walter Koschmal 8. Myths and Democratic Attitudes in Poland and Russia: An Intermedial Comparison Alexander Woll 9. Contested Traditions? The Democratic Uses of Three National Holidays in Contemporary Hungary Heino Nyyssonen 10. The Paradox of Infra-Liberalism: Towards a Genealogy of Managed Democracy in Putins Russia Sergei Prozorov 11. Myth and Democratic Identity in Putins Russia Richard Sakwa

Additional information

NPB9780415428224
9780415428224
041542822X
Democracy and Myth in Russia and Eastern Europe by Alexander Woll (University of Regensburg, Germany)
New
Hardback
Taylor & Francis Ltd
2007-10-03
240
N/A
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