Article(electronic)October 1991

Legitimation from the Top to Civil Society: Politico-Cultural Change in Eastern Europe

In: World politics: a quarterly journal of international relations, Volume 44, Issue 1, p. 49-80

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Abstract

Communism has collapsed in Eastern Europe because the regimes, no ionger justified by their Soviet hegemon, lost confidence in their "mandate from heaven." Domestically and internationally discredited, East European regimes had traditionally shielded themselves behind a principle of legitimation from the top that saw communism as the global fulfillment of a universal theory of history. Once the theory became utterly indefensible, a crippling legitimacy vacuum ensued. Reacting against that theory, East European dissent, and a civil society of sorts, survived under communism not just as an underground political adversary but as a visible cultural and existential counterimage of communism. This fact must be given proper weight when assessing the capacity of civil society to rebound in postcommunist Eastern Europe.

Languages

English

Publisher

Project MUSE

ISSN: 1086-3338

DOI

10.2307/2010423

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