04318nam 2200637Ia 450 991078991920332120230801222410.01-280-57965-X97866136094341-4411-5173-7(CKB)2670000000175367(EBL)894603(OCoLC)787843601(SSID)ssj0000655776(PQKBManifestationID)12328596(PQKBTitleCode)TC0000655776(PQKBWorkID)10631350(PQKB)10078826(MiAaPQ)EBC894603(Au-PeEL)EBL894603(CaPaEBR)ebr10554650(CaONFJC)MIL360943(EXLCZ)99267000000017536720120510d2012 uy 0engur|n|---|||||txtccrEthnicity, nationalism and the European Cold War[electronic resource] /edited by Robert KnightLondon ;New York Continuumc20121 online resource (225 p.)Description based upon print version of record.1-4725-2931-6 1-4411-5027-7 Includes bibliographical references.Title; Copyright; Dedication; Contents; Acknowledgements; Abbreviations; About the Authors; Introduction; 1 The Return of the Tribes; 2 Misperceptions and Myopia?; Chapter 1 Western Perspectives on Ethnic Politics; 1 Ethnic Politics in the Cold War; 2 The 'Ethnic Revival' in Western Europe; Chapter 2 Re-thinking Ethnicity and the Origins of the Cold War: The Austrian-Hungarian Borderlands; Chapter 3 Identity, Sovereignty and the Cold War at the Italo-Yugoslav Border: Between Empire, Nationhood and Class1; 1 Alternatives to Homogeneity?2 Competing Forms of Legitimacy and Identity at the Italo-Yugoslav Border3 Pro-Italian Newspapers: between Empire and Nation-State; 4 Pro-Yugoslav Newspapers: Between Ethnic Nations and Nations of Comrades; 4 Conclusion; Chapter 4 Kicking Under the Table: Minority Conflict Between Hungary and Romania1; 1 Introduction; 2 The Hungarian-Romanian Border; 3 The Practice of Romanian Minority Policy; 4 Hungarian Communist Reactions; 5 The Cold War and Ethnic Conflict; 6 The Hungarian Revolution and After; 7 Public Opinion and Nationalism; 8 ConclusionChapter 5 Insecurity and Control: Bulgaria and its Turkish Minority1 Introduction; 2 The Bulgarian-Turkish Context; 3 The Stalinist Model; 4 Overcoming Stalinism through Integration; 5 Bulgarianization in the Last Phase; 6 Conclusion; Chapter 6 South Tyrol: Ethnic Winner in the Cold War; 1 Introduction; 2 South Tyrol within the Western 'bloc'; 3 The Disappearance of Ethnic Politics?; 4 South Tyrol Returns to the International Agenda; 5 South Tyrol as a Secret Service Playground; 6 DeĢtente and the End of the Cold War; 7 ConclusionChapter 7 Sorbian Ethnic Interests, the GDR State and the Cold War1 Introduction; 2 The Sorbs at the Start of the Cold War; 3 Sorbs and the SED; 4 The Cominform Dispute and Surveillance; 5 Minority and International Politics; 6 Culture and Economic Development; 7 Conclusion; ConclusionThis book questions the prevalent assumption that ethnicity and nationalist politics had nothing to do with the Cold War and that, far from being frozen until the fall of communism, they remained central to the conflict in Europe. Leading scholars bring their understanding of particular regions to bear on the wider issue of why ethnic explanations were written out of the discourse and whether this was a failure on the part of Western observers. This in turn has led to an overly simple understanding of power flowing downwards, from superpower to nation state and from state to society. Engaging EthnicityEuropeHistoryNationalismEuropeHistoryCold WarInfluenceEthnicityHistory.NationalismHistory.Cold WarInfluence.909.825Knight Robert1185659MiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQBOOK9910789919203321Ethnicity, nationalism and the European Cold War3824063UNINA