Social Change and Political Transformation in Eastern Europe. Plan of the Course

Similar documents
Political Science 2331

Political Science 552 Communist and Post-Communist Politics State University of New York at Albany Fall 2008

Political Science 552 Communist and Post-Communist Politics State University of New York at Albany Fall 2015

Political Science 552 Communist and Post-Communist Politics State University of New York at Albany Spring 2010

Political Science 552 Communist and Post-Communist Politics State University of New York at Albany Spring 2012

Capitalism and Democracy in Central and Eastern Europe. Assessing the Legacy of Communist Rule

Rise and Fall of Communism in the 20th Century GVPT 459 R TYD 1114 Tu and Th: 11am 12:15pm University of Maryland Spring 2018

Political Science 948 Seminar on Post-Communist Politics

Social Movements, Contentious Politics, and Democracy

CAPITALISM AND DEMOCRACY IN CENTRAL AND EASTERN EUROPE

Eastern European Politics POLI 359/INTL390 College of Charleston Political Science/International Studies Spring Course Description

IR 222: Politics of New Europe

Syllabus. Research Seminar, GPS, Spring 2018

MW 11-11:50 Hallock Auditorium, AJLC Section 01: Fri :50 King 127 Section 02: Fri. 2:30-3:20 King 339 Section 03: Fri. 3:30-4:20 King 339

UNDIVIDED EUROPE DEMOCRATIZATION AND INTERNATIONAL ORGANIZATIONS AFTER COMMUNISM

Undergraduate Program in Central European Studies (UPCES) The Rise and Fall of Communism in Central and Eastern Europe

Challenges to Soviet Control and the End of the Cold War I. Early Cold War A. Eastern European Soviet Control 1. In the early years of the Cold War,

SCHOOL OF INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS AND PUBLIC AFFAIRS FUDAN UNIVERSITY. Political Development in Modern China (Chinese Politics) Fall 2010

Ideas Behind Politics Communism, Post-communism and Civil Society in Central Europe

THE DILEMMAS OF DISSIDENCE IN EAST-CENTRAL EUROPE

This course explores one of the twentieth century s defining political phenomena: the attempt to create a systemic alternative to global capitalism.

ECON 238 : TRANSITION FROM CENTRAL PLAN TO MARKET

GOVERNMENT 1190: THE POLITICS OF EUROPE

Pre 1990: Key Events

Old and New Europe, 1914 to the Present

FALL OF COMMUNISM IN EUROPE

The Cold War: Europe between the US and the USSR

Course: Mondays 9:00-10:40 Office hours: Tuesdays 14:00-17:00

Class Times: TTH 2:00-3:30 Meeting Place: PAR 203

Undergraduate Program in Central European Studies

In Love with Power: Non Democratic Regimes in Central and Eastern Europe After 1945

Instructor: Benjamin C. Brower Office: Garrison Office Hours: WF 9-10:00, and by appointment Telephone:

Introduction to Comparative Politics POL 2339WA Tuesdays 7-10pm

Study Center in Budapest, Hungary

Political Science 659: Politics and Society of Contemporary Eastern Europe

Fall 2004 Professors Marc Blecher, Steve Crowley and Chris Howell Tuesdays and Thursdays, 1:30-2:45, King 337

Democracy and economic development

Undergraduate Program in Central European Studies (UPCES)

History 160: America in the Sixties

THE EASTERN EUROPE AND THE USSR

IR 169 INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS OF RUSSIA AND EASTERN EUROPE Spring 2014 Mondays and Wednesdays, 2:35-3:50 LI 404

POL 207Y: POLITICS IN EUROPE. Students are required to complete four assignments in order to pass the course:

PLEASE NOTE: THIS IS THE SYLLABUS FOR A PREVIOUS VERSION OF THE COURSE. IN SPRING 2017 IT WILL BE SIMILAR.

GOVERNMENT 334: RUSSIAN/POST-SOVIET POLITICS

The End of Communism: China, Soviet Union & Socialist Bloc A P W O R L D H I S T O R Y C H A P T E R 3 1 B

Political Science 272: Theories of International Relations Spring 2010 Thurs.-Tues., 9:40-10:55.

GOVT-452: Third World Politics Professor Daniel Brumberg

A student cannot receive a grade for the course unless he/she completes all writing assignments.

Rhodes College. Department of International Studies

SOC 100 Introduction to Sociology Spring 2018

Comparative Governments and Politics

Skilling, H. G., B

Honors course COURSE TITLE:

Contemporary Issues in Law: Law and Human Rights in Central Europe Syllabus Spring 2011

A. Russia and Poland Compared (Dr Harald Wydra) MT 2018

University of Montana Department of Political Science

YORK UNIVERSITY Department of Political Science POLS A POST COMMUNIST TRANSFORMATIONS: CAN EAST BECOME WEST? Fall 2014

Path of Democratization: Circuitous in Slovakia But Not in the Czech Republic

International Relations THE TRANSITION OF THE EUROPEAN WORLD. THE POST-COMMUNIST CHALLENGES

Citizenship is a form of membership, which is a type of relation. It has thus three components:

Political Science 563 Government and Politics of the People s Republic of China State University of New York at Albany Fall 2014

Section 3. The Collapse of the Soviet Union

Boston University Problems and Issues of Post-Mao China. Semester II /2007 CLA IR 585/ PO 558 Tuesday, Thursday: 2:00-3:30 CAS 314

Describe the provisions of the Versailles treaty that affected Germany. Which provision(s) did the Germans most dislike?

Post-Communist Legacies

POL 3410 (2): The Politics of Economic Inequality in the USA and Europe Fall 2011 Tu/Th 2:30-3:45 Anderson 350 Course Outline

Post-Communist Human Development in World-Historical Perspective

CET Syllabus of Record

UNIVERSITY OF WISCONSIN-MADISON Department of History

Prague, Czech Republic Study Center. Course Syllabus

UNIVERSITY OF TORONTO Fall 2010 POL 414 H 1 F / H 1 F POLITICS OF INDEPENDENT UKRAINE. Instructor: Olga Kesarchuk

SCOPE AND OBJECTIVES IMPORTANT DATES

The Balkans: Powder Keg of Europe. by Oksana Drozdova, M.A. Lecture VI

Anthropology of Global Health & Development ANTH 463 Spring 2015, MW 1:30-2:45 University of Hawai`i at Manoa

Political Science (PSCI)

Chapter 29 - Challenging the Postwar Order

CIEE in Budapest, Hungary

Other assigned readings will be available on Blackboard.

Boston University Study Abroad London Britain and the European Question: The Confluence of History and Politics CAS IR 392/HI 243 (Elective B)

Reinterpreting Empire, Colonizing Processes, and Cross Cultural Exchange in Modern World History

Fall 2006 History 222 Central Europe, : Identities, Ideologies, and Borderlands

University of Toronto Department of Political Science. POL101: Democracy, Dictatorship, War, and Peace

Understanding the history of youth

The End of Bipolarity

THE DOMESTIC SOURCES OF AMERICAN FOREIGN POLICY

Name: Period: Date: UNIT 9: TOTALITARIANISM Reading Guide 61: Perestroika

The Dynamics of Communism: Analyzing and Understanding the Communist System in former Czechoslovakia

Lessons from the Cold War, What made possible the end of the Cold War? 4 explanations. Consider 1985.

University of Wisconsin-Madison Department of History Semester I,

Politics 115 Post-Soviet Politics. Spring 2010 Stephen Crowley MWF 3:30-4:20 King 123

The Evolution of Western Ideas and Institutions Since the Seventeenth Century History 102 Spring T, Th, 1:00pm-2:15pm Professor Suzanne Kaufman

HISTORY United States since 1877 Spring 2019 TTH 3:00-4:15 PM UNIV 201

Spring 2014 Office: Faner Hall Faner 2365 TR: 9:30-11:30a Politics of Russia and the Post-Soviet States

History 48: South Asia and the World

ALFRED B. EVANS, JR., Professor Emeritus, Department of Political Science, California State University, Fresno

HISTORY 322 Terrorism in the Russian Empire Tues & Thurs CBC C-216 Spring 2011

Instructor: Kaarin Michaelsen. "Modern Europe, "

Credits: 3 Office Hours: Wednesdays 10:30-1:30 Fall 2017 Sage Hall 4624

Content Statement: Analyze how the U.S. and U.S.S.R. became superpowers and competed for global influence.

Political Scrence 261. Comparative Government and Politics: DEMOCRACY AND DEMOCRA TIZA TION

Transcription:

1 (Politics 214 and Sociology 230) Prof. Vujačić, King 305a Spring 2005 Office hours: Tue.,12.30-2, Thurs. 1-2.30 Tues., Thurs., 3.00-4.15 Prof. Crowley, Rice 211 Office hours: Tues, Thurs. 1:00-2:30 Social Change and Political Transformation in Eastern Europe This course focuses on Eastern Europe as the first relatively backward region in the world capitalist system. We will begin with a historical introduction to the region that raises questions about the causes and consequences of this relative backwardness. Next, we will turn to communist revolutions, Stalinism, reform communism, the rise of dissent, and the revolutions of 1989. Finally, we will discuss the problems of the post-communist era, including attempts to build democracy and capitalism, the rise of nationalism, and social problems such as increasing inequalities and the shifting politics of gender and labor. It is our hope that in studying the developmental history of Eastern Europe, students will acquire not only historical knowledge of the region and its problems, but also develop new conceptual tools for studying social change in the non-western world. As a region which has undergone several cycles of economic and political transformation and tried out a variety of different developmental models, but which still faces the challenge of modernization, Eastern Europe provides a good starting point for analyzing the problems of social change and political transformation generally. The course is divided into three parts. Plan of the Course In the first part of the course, we will explore how Eastern Europe became the other Europe. Specifically, we will examine some of the main factors that impeded the growth of capitalism and liberal institutions in Eastern Europe, relegating its peoples to a peripheral status in the world capitalist system. What were the reasons for the relative backwardness of Eastern Europe vis-à-vis the Western countries and what were the political consequences of its economic lag? We will also take a look at the developmental problems faced by the predominantly peasant societies of inter-war Eastern Europe. In part two, we will explore the rise of Communism as a developmental alternative to Western capitalism, beginning with an examination of the social base of communist movements and the sources of its attraction to intellectual elites. We will then move on to the reasons of discontent with the Stalinist model which led to the Polish and Hungarian revolts of 1956 and the Prague Spring of 1968. Why did so many intellectuals become disillusioned with real, existing socialism and why did they become dissidents? How was it that a multi-million working-class

2 movement (Solidarity) arose in a socialist country ruled in the name of the interests of that very working class? Finally, how did communism collapse so quickly throughout Eastern Europe? In part three, we explore the dilemmas posed by the demise of communism as an alternative to Western capitalism and liberal democracy. In particular, we focus on three distinct challenges that face post-communist Eastern Europe: building democracy, market transformation, and the construction of viable nation-states. More specifically, we try to show that these goals are not always compatible and are sometimes contradictory, with the consequence of exacerbating national and social tensions in the region. One tragic example of the obstacles which nationalism has posed to socio-economic and political transformation along liberal lines is the tragic war in former Yugoslavia whose roots and course we explore in some detail. We then move on to a consideration of post-communist social problems, especially those relating to gender relations and the politics of labor. Finally, we conclude with some theoretically and historically grounded speculation on the future of this troubled and fascinating region of the world. Required Books Gale Stokes, ed., From Stalinism to Pluralism. A Documentary History of Eastern Europe Since 1945 (New York and Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1996. ISBN: 0-19- 509446-8) Vladimir Tismaneanu, Reinventing Politics : Eastern Europe from Stalin to Havel (The Free Press, New York. ISBN: 0029326052) David Ost, Solidarity and the Politics of Anti-Politics (Temple University Press. ISBN: 0-87722-655-5). J.F.Brown, The Grooves of Change (Duke University Press, 2001. ISBN 08-223-2637-X) All other readings will be on E-Res, Oberlin s electronic reserve system. In addition, several hard copies of the books will be available at the reserve room in Mudd Library. Course Requirements Requirements for this class include regular attendance in class, mandatory attendance at film screenings outside of regular class time, a mid-term quiz, two 6-7 page papers, and a final examination. Grading will be done on the following basis:

3 Mandatory attendance in class and at film screenings 15% Mid-term quiz 15% First paper 20% Second paper 20% Final examination 30% Part One: Eastern Europe Before Communism Week One: What is Eastern Europe? Introduction to the Region and Modernization Theory Tues. 2/8 Gale Stokes, Eastern Europe s Defining Fault Lines, in Three Eras of Political Change in Eastern Europe, 7-22. Stanislaw Baranczak, E.E.: The Extraterritorial, Breathing Under Water and Other East European Essays, 9-15. Thurs. 2/10 Samuel Huntington, Political Order in Changing Societies, 1-32 Week Two: Modernization vs. World System Theory Tues. 2/15 Huntington, Political Order in Changing Societies, 32-92. Thurs. 2/17 Immanuel Wallerstein, Three Paths of National Development: Sixteenth Century Europe, The Capitalist World Economy, 37-48. Week Three: Relative Backwardness and Eastern Europe in the Interwar Period Tues. 2/22 Gale Stokes, Dependency and the Rise of Nationalism in Southeastern Europe in Three Eras of Political Change in Eastern Europe, 23-36.

4 Andrew Janos, The Politics of Backwardness in Continental Europe1780-1945, World Politics, vol.xli, no.3, April 1989, 325-359. Thurs. 2/24 Margaret Macmillan, Rumania, Paris 1919, 125-135. Mattei Dogan, Romania: 1919-1938, in Myron Weiner and Ergun Ozbudun, eds., Competitive Elections in Developing Countries, 369-393. Eugen Weber, The Men of the Archangel, in George Mosse, ed., International Fascism, 318-343. Week Four: World War Two and the Rise of Communism in Eastern Europe Tues. 3/1 Vladimir Tismaneanu, Reinventing Politics, 1-22. R.V. Burks, The Dynamics of Communism in Eastern Europe, 38-87, 107-130. Film Screeening: Istvan Szabo s Sunshine Thurs. 3/3 Istvan Deak, Review of the film Sunshine, The New York Review of Books, July 20, 2000, 30-32. Jan T.Gross, Neighbors, The New Yorker, March 12, 2001. Josef Škvorecky, The Bass Saxophone, 3-28. Part Two: The Rise and Fall of Communism in Eastern Europe Week Five: Stalinism, Intellectuals, and the Titoist Challenge: 1948-1956 Tues. 3/8 Vladimir Tismaneanu, Reinventing Politics, 22-54. Gale Stokes, From Stalinism to Pluralism, 19-77. Thur. 3/10

5 Richard Lowenthal, Development vs. Utopia in Communist Policy, in Chalmers Johnson, ed., Change in Communist Systems, pp. 33-117, 135-153. Week Six: Reform Communism and Its Dilemmas: From 1956 to the Prague Spring Tues. 3/15 Tismaneanu, Reinventing Politics, 54-111. Richard Lowenthal, The Ruling Party in a Mature Society, in Mark G.Field, ed., The Social Consequences of Modernization in Communist Societies, 81-118. Stokes, From Stalinism to Pluralism, 78-87; 94-114; 126-134 Thurs. 3/17 First paper due in class Valerie Bunce, The Empire Strikes Back: The Evolution of the Eastern Bloc from a Soviet Asset to a Soviet Liability, International Organization, (Winter 1985), 1-46. Alex Nove, Is There a Ruling Class in the USSR?, in Anthony Giddens and David Held, eds., Classes, Power and Conflict, 588-604. Week Seven: The Crisis of Communism and The Rise of Civil Society: The Case of Poland Tues. 3/22 Tismaneanu, Reinventing Politics, 113-174. Stokes, From Stalinism to Pluralism, 137-87, 193-215. Film Screening: Man of Marble Thurs. 3/24 David Ost, Solidarity and the Politics of Anti-Politics, chapters 1-2; 4-6 (1-32; 55-112) Week Eight: The Collapse of Communism and the Revolutions of 1989 Tues. 4/5

6 Tismaneanu, Reinventing Politics, 175-239. Gale Stokes, Modes of Opposition Leading to the Revolution in Eastern Europe? in Three Eras of Political Change in Eastern Europe, 161-181. Thurs. 4/7 Mid-term Quiz in class, 40 minutes Katherine Verdery, What Was Socialism and Why Did It Fall? in Verdery, What Was Socialism and What Comes Next?, 19-38. Andrei Codrescu, The Death of a Dictator, in Codrescu, The Hole in the Flag, 25-51. Timur Kuran, Now Out of Never: The Element of Surprise in the East European Revolution of 1989, World Politics, October 1991. Stokes, From Stalinism to Pluralism, 216-223; 235-242; 253-267. Part Three: Post-Communism and Its Challenges Week Nine: The Challenge of Capitalist Transformation 4/12-4/14 J.F.Brown, The Grooves of Change, 60-72. Jeffrey Sachs, What Is To Be Done, Economist, January 13, 1990. R.Frydman, K.Murphy, A Rapasczynski, Capitalism with a Comrade's Face, 1-54. Kazimierz Poznanski, Building Capitalism with Communist Tools: Eastern Europe s Defective Transition, East European Politics and Societies, Spring 2001. Akos Rona-Tas and Joszef Borocz, Presocialist and Socialist Legacies among Business Elites, in John Hingley and Gyorgy Lengyel, eds., Elites After State Socialism (Rowman and Littlefield, 2000). Week Ten: The Challenge of Democratic Transformation 4/19-21 J.F.Brown, The Grooves of Change, 73-143.

7 Ken Jowitt, The Leninist Legacy, in Vladimir Tismaneanu, The Revolutions of 1989, 213-230. Bela Greskowitz, Crisis-Proof, Poor Democracies, The Political Economy of Protest and Patience, 177-187. Anna Khakee, Democracy and Marketization in Central and Eastern Europe: Case Closed?, East European Politics and Societies, Spring 2002. Vaclav Havel and Vaclav Klaus, Rival Visions of Civil Society, Journal of Democracy, January 1996. Week Eleven: Post-Communist Gender, Labor, and Social Politics. 4/26-4/28 Second paper due 4/28 in class Branko Milanović, Income, Inequality, and Poverty during the Transition from Planned to Market Economy, 23-39. Susan Gal and Gail Kligman, The Politics of Gender After Socialism, 1-62. Stephen Crowley, Explaining Labor Weakness in Post-Communist Europe: Historical Legacies and Comparative Perspective, Eastern European Politics and Societies, Vol. 18. no. 3, 2004. Marc Morje Howard, "The Weakness of Postcommunist Civil Society," Journal of Democracy Vol.13, No. 1, January 2002. Week Twelve: Post-Communist Nationalism: The Yugoslav Catastrophe 5/2-5/5 Film Screening: No Man s Land Gale Stokes, The Devil s Finger: The Disintegration of Yugoslavia, in Gale Stokes, Three Eras of Change in Eastern Europe, 109-143. Veljko Vujačić, Slobodan Milošević: Charismatic Leader or Plebscitarian Demagogue?, forthcoming in Marc Howard and Rudy Sil, Festschrift for Ken Jowitt. Chuck Sudetic, Blood and Vengeance. One Family s Story of the War in Bosnia, 1-134. Stokes, From Stalinism to Pluralism, 256-288.

8 Week Thirteen: Small States in a Big World 5/10-5/12 J.F.Brown, The Grooves of Change, 200-243. Andrew Janos, From Eastern Empire to Western Hegemony, East-European Politics and Societies, 15, 2, 2001, 221-249. Jeffrey Kopstein and David Reilly, Geographic Diffusion and the Transformation of the Postcommunist World, World Politics, October 2000. Gregorz Ekiert, Ten Years After: An Optimistic View, EEPS, Spring 1999. Tony Judt, Romania: Bottom of the Heap, The New York Review of Books, November 1, 2001, 41-45. EU enlargement: When East Meets West, The Economist, November 20, 2003. Ana Grzymala-Busse and Abby Innes, Great Expectations: The EU and Domestic Political Competition in East Central Europe, East European Politics and Societies, vol. 17, 1, 2003. Stephen Holmes, A European Doppelstaat? East European Politics and Societies, vol. 17, 1, 2003. Final exam: Friday, May 20