
About the Topic
At the thirtieth anniversary of the collapse of Communism, the liberal wave it unleashed in the East of Europe now seems to be in retreat; new authoritarians challenge democratic norms, revive statist economics, re-imagine liberal Europe as colonial, and re-map the world by aligning with resurgent illiberals such as China and Russia. Can the history of 1989 shine light onto the roots of this new world? What was overlooked in histories of what once was considered the annus mirabilis of Europe? At this event, James Mark will discuss his new co-written book and address the many visions of the future from authoritarian capitalism to populism to democratic socialism which circulated in those years, and argues that we need a truly global approach to understand why liberal democracy won, the fragility of the consensus it created, and its undoing in the last decade.
Participants
About the Speakers
James Mark is Professor of History at the University of Exeter (UK) and currently fellow at the Netherlands Institute for Advanced Study (2019/20). His research interests include the history of memory, Communist and post-Communist transformations, and Eastern Europe in global perspective. He is the author of The Unfinished Revolution: Making Sense of the Communist Past in Central-Eastern Europe (2010), which was nominated for the Longman History Today Book Prize 2011 and selected as one of the ‘best books of 2011’ by Foreign Affairs. He is co-author of Europe’s 1968: Voices of Revolt (2013) and 1989: A Global History of Eastern Europe (2019), and co-editor of Secret Agents and the Memory of Everyday Collaboration in Communist Eastern Europe (2017) and Alternative Encounters: Eastern Europe and the Postcolonial World (2020).
Artemy M. Kalinovsky is Senior Lecturer in East European Studies at the University of Amsterdam and the author, most recently, of Laboratory of Socialist Development: Cold War Politics and Decolonization in Soviet Tajikistan (Cornell University Press, 2018).
Fenneke Wekker (moderator) is Head of Academic Affairs at NIAS, and researcher Political Sociology at the University of Amsterdam.
Registration
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