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The 1989 Revolutions in Central and Eastern Europe
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29 March 2016

POLITICAL SCIENCE / General, Revolutionary groups and movements, HISTORY / Modern / 20th Century, Politics and government, General and world history
"this volume is rich in both theoretical insights and empirical detail"
(Anna Grzymala-Busse, Slavonic and East European Review Volume 92, no.2 April 2014), Anna Grzymala-Busse, Department of Political Science University of Michigan, Slavonic and East European Review Volume 92, no.2, 1 April 2014
Timeline - Eastern Europe, 1945-91
Leaders of East European and Soviet communist parties, 1945-91
East European communist parties and their post-communist successors
1.The collapse of communism in Eastern Europe: origins, processes, outcomes - Kevin McDermott and Matthew Stibbe
Part I. The historical longue durée
2. Echoes and precedents: 1989 in historical perspective - Robin Okey
Part II. The Gorbachev factor
3. The multifaceted external Soviet role in processes towards unanticipated revolutions - Mary Buckley
4. 'When your neighbour changes his wallpaper': the 'Gorbachev factor' and the collapse of the German Democratic Republic- Peter Grieder
Part III. The East European revolutions: internal and external perspectives
5. The demise of communism in Poland: a staged evolution or failed revolution? - Tom Junes
6. The international context of Hungarian transition, 1989: the view from Budapest - Lászl? Borhi
7. The demise of the communist regime in Czechoslovakia, 1987-89: a socio-economic perspective - Michal Pullmann
8. Discourse and power: the FSN and the mythologisation of the Romanian revolution - Kevin Adamson and Sergiu Florean
9. A revolution in two stages: the curiosity of the Bulgarian case - Elena Simeonova
Part IV. Then and now: continuity and change in the academic and cultural perceptions of the communist era and its aftermath
10. A hopeless case of optimism? Jürgen Kuczynski and the end of the GDR - Matthew Stibbe
11. Meanings of 1989: right-wing discourses in post-communist Poland - Artur Lipinski
12. From the 'thirst for change' and 'hunger for truth' to a 'revolution that hardly happened': public protests and reconstructions of the past in Bulgaria in the 1990s - Nikolai Vukov
13. Afterword: the discursive constitution of revolution and revolution envy - James Krapfl
Select bibliography
Index