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The Long 1989

Decades of Global Revolution

Piotr H Kosicki editor

Format:Hardback

Publisher:Central European University Press

Published:15th Oct '19

Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back

The Long 1989 cover

The fall of communism in Europe is now the frame of reference for any mass mobilization, from the Arab Spring to the Occupy movement to Brexit. Even thirty years on, 1989 still figures as a guide and motivation for political change. It is now a platitude to call 1989 a “world event,” but the chapters in this volume show how it actually became one. The authors of these nine essays consider how revolutionary events in Europe resonated years later and thousands of miles away: in China and South Africa, Chile and Afghanistan, Turkey and the USA. They trace the circulation of people, practices, and concepts that linked these countries, turning local developments into a global phenomenon. At the same time, they examine the many shifts that revolution underwent in transit. All nine chapters detail the process of mutation, adaptation, and appropriation through which foreign affairs found new meanings on the ground. They interrogate the uses and understandings of 1989 in particular national contexts, often many years after the fact. Taken together, this volume asks how the fall of communism in Europe became the basis for revolutionary action around the world, proposing a paradigm shift in global thinking about revolution and protest.

"The collective volume aims to analyse the events of 1989 in a broader perspective. On the one hand, it interrogates the impact of the 1989 revolutions of Central and Eastern Europe in the world at that particular moment, and, on the other, it argues that the revolution which started in 1989 goes on while inspiring mass mobilisation in other areas and in recent years, as was the case with the ‘Arab spring’, or the ‘Occupy Wall Street’ movement in the USA, to name but a few. Inspired by the idea of Joseph de Maistre, who wrote about the French Revolution of 1789 that 'for a long time we did not fully understand the revolution of which we were witnesses; for a long time, we took it to be an event. We were mistaken; it was an epoch', the editors and the authors look at how the events of 1989 and their aftermath 'resonated years later and thousands of miles away'. The nine chapters deal with various topics such as Poland and the apartheid in South Africa, Soviet Central Asia, Tiananmen, the American Culture Wars, the Iraq war and the Middle East, the uprisings of 2011 in Northern Africa and the Occupy movement, the Euromaidan, etc."

-- Claudia-Florentina Dobre * MemoScapes: Romanian Journal of Memory and Identity Studies *

"By elevating the 1989 revolutions from an event to an epoch, the authors want to place it on an equal footing with other historical epochs—neither the culmination nor a stage of a process of global liberalization, nor a mythical Year Zero that closes the postwar period and sets it apart from our own, still nameless post-Cold War time. Instead, in the editors’ words, the 1989 revolutions were a 'signpost of gradual change.' The contradictions, discrepancies, and implicit polemics present in various chapters are in themselves a sign of the complexity of the topics tackled by the volume. The Long 1989 will remain a valuable contribution especially in the field of intellectual history."

-- Luka Lisjak Gabrijelčič * H-Net Reviews *

"Ultimately both The Global 1989 and The Long 1989 are best viewed as studies in transnational history, or more precisely, transregional history, simply because their very theme, 1989, is regionally defined. Both works transcend any narrowly defined regional perspective and overcome purely internalist explanations, but ultimately still fail to reckon with the global as a theoretically construed totality, and thus privilege the connective aspects of the global history of 1989 at the expense of partly neglecting the integrative ones. None of this distracts from the fact that The Global 1989 is probably the best transregional history of 1989 one can read today, and The Long 1989 is the best in-depth companion to it on select topics." https://www.cambridge.org/core/journals/slavic-review/article/long-1989-decades-…

-- Judit Bodnár * Slavic Review *

"In The Long 1989, the breakthrough of that year is presented not just as past events but as multifaceted processes that are still in progress in different places around the globe. The authors show a variety of changes all over the world that were affected by the changeover in Central and Eastern Europe, as well as Western influences that determined and shaped the last revolution in the twentieth century. They trace the diffusion of the idea under scrutiny in spatial and temporal terms, showing various ways of understanding the concept of revolution and, to some extent, presenting semantic tensions between the concept of revolution and counterrevolution. In this way, the publication contributes to the field of history of ideas. By showing entangled paths of this wandering idea of peaceful revolution and examining the nature of the post-1989 world order, the authors present revolutions of 1989 as a cultural and political pattern. As they trace the diffusion of the idea under scrutiny spatially and temporally, the volume could also serve as a handbook of exploring migrating ideas in their meandering historical and social semantics."

-- Ewa Wróblewska-Trochimiuk * Sprawy Narodowościowe *

"The contributors to The Long 1989 seek to shore up the enduring significance of the year as 'the paradigmatic revolution of our time', more resonant and more potent than 1789 or 1917. For Kosicki and Kunakhovich, the year 1989 has unique historical significance: 'Its core ideas, lexicon, and tactics now serve as archetypes of revolutionary action'. If this bold claim is right, then any scholarly effort to characterize the fall of the BerlinWall asmerely an epiphenomenon, just a singlewave in a vast roiling sea of gradual change, will surely falter. Our political 9magination demands heroic stories and decisive turning points, even if our history does not."

-- William I. Hitchcock * Journal of Modern History *

"The essays do successfully indicate that Central/Eastern Europe has been of major influence in international politics. The events covered in the book are important far beyond Central and Eastern Europe. Even though these events are not quite epoch-making, they do constitute a crucial part of the history of Europe and generally of the West." (Oldrich Tuma) "The danger arises that the conversation about the collapse of Communism in Eastern Europe will be tainted by frivolous comparisons, facile analogies, and contrived causal claims—and eventually might become an amalgam of randomly selected analytical themes and arbitrarily constructed narrative vignettes. This volume exemplifies that danger." (Venelin I. Ganev) "The value of this volume lies in its coherent intertwining of theoretical frameworks and historically grounded analyses. As the editors acknowledge, their book is about 'the slow, uneven spread of 1989 across the world.' It is also a particularly timely and sobering intellectual project that helps us fathom the origins of the ongoing controversies regarding historical legacies, civic engagements, and the future of liberal values in these dark times." (Marius Stan) https://direct.mit.edu/jcws/article-abstract/25/4/222/118961/Reassessing-the-End-of-the-Cold-War-and-Its?redirectedFrom=fulltext

-- Oldrich Tuma * Journal of Cold War Studi

ISBN: 9789633862834

Dimensions: unknown

Weight: unknown

290 pages