Suchergebnisse
Filter
19 Ergebnisse
Sortierung:
Despre valorile verbului a face
In: Communication and Argumentation in the Public Sphere, Band 1, Heft 2, S. 318-322
Englezoaice în ofensivă: spaţiu public în ramă de comedie
In: Communication and Argumentation in the Public Sphere, Band 1, Heft 3, S. 360-369
Semantica cuvântului patrie şi evoluţia mentalităţilor
In: Communication and Argumentation in the Public Sphere, Band 1, Heft 3, S. 440-442
Ficţiuni autolegitimatoare în discursul ideologic comunist. Dimensiunea simbolică şi mitică a "noii religii"
In: Communication and Argumentation in the Public Sphere, Band 1, Heft 1, S. 54-66
Umbrele paradisului: scriitori români şi francezi în Uniunea Sovietică
In: Istorie contemporană
World Affairs Online
Intelighenția rusă azi: interviuri, discuții, polemici despre Rusia de ieri și de azi
In: Rotonda
Dacismul şi avatarurile discursului istoriografic postcomunist
In: Studia politica: Romanian political science review ; revista română de ştiinţă politică, Band 7, Heft 1, S. 95-115
The study focuses on the analysis of a minor literature selection. My application, being determined by the nature of the selected theme (the major historical literature, which offers important interpretative reference points, usually does not appeal to the repertory characteristic of the historiographic and mythologizing imagery), is also conditioned by a personal concern pertaining to the resurgence, in recent years, of this type of imagery that usually affects the perception of historicity as well as the structuring of civil society. The themes of postcommunist Dacianism represent a thin catalog of theories and motives, which primarily aim to the reinvention of the traditional historiographic discourse through the reinterpretation of the older or more recent archaeological discoveries from a Dacianist perspective. The anti-Semitic themes from the post-communist discourse disseminated especially in connection to the instauration of the communist regime in Romania, are connected to the new radicalisms as well. Publishers that promote nationalist, xenophobic, anti-Semitic, and fictional along with historical Dacianist literature are also responsible for the dissemination of extremist ideas using Dacianist rhetoric. This minor literature, ignored by the academic establishment, but benefiting from a large segment of culture consumers, has had appeal especially among adolescents attracted by the soteriological profile of Dacian heroes. The influence of texts can be explained by the manner in which major themes of the national historical discourse are vulgarized and reinterpreted from the perspective of some rhetoric of crises. The search for heroes in an ancient and hypothetical "golden age" (we refer to the Pelasgic Empire) is part of the already obsolete repertoire of mythological reconstructions. The refuge in the past (in fact, a sign of maladjustment and the inability for social and identitary reformulation) and sacrifice become the reference points for the socio-cultural behavior proposed in a world, which is considered hostile and conspiring. Anti-Semitic attitudes go hand in hand with the instances of identitary exacerbation produced on the traditional basis of victimology, on the Orthodoxist-Dacianist exaltations. We cannot but to be astonished by the nationalist mixture, which paradoxically combine Dacianism and Orthodoxism, or Dacianism and alternative religions, the latter occurrence being also violently anti-Semitic through its rejection of Judaism as a subversive and unilateral religion. In conclusion, post-communist Dacianism (promoted especially by the Dacia Revival International Society ), as an answer to the identitary crisis, fits into the autochtonist historiographic trend, while more radical approaches (see the extremist publications and the books recently published especially by the "Obiectiv" Publishing House from Craiova) are somehow closely related to both the "interwar prophetism", which they vulgarize, and to the legionary mystique too.
Dinamica voturilor invalide în Europa centrală şi de est
In: Studia politica: Romanian political science review ; revista română de ştiinţă politică, Band 13, Heft 3, S. 441-455
This article tests if the democratization process in Central and Eastern Europe
coincides with a decrease in number of invalid votes. Using descriptive
statistics, we seek for evidence from 67 elections in ten countries from the
regions during the period 1990-2012. By the beginning of the 2000s, ten years
after the breakdown of communist regime, the percentages of invalid votes
in the countries of Central and Eastern Europe reached levels comparable to
those of the Western European democracies. However, significant differences
between regions and countries endure. This article adds to the literature by
being the first to inquire into the subject of invalid votes in the Central and
Eastern Europe.
Moartea comunistă în România
In: Studia politica: Romanian political science review ; revista română de ştiinţă politică, Band 8, Heft 2, S. 267-293
The study catches a glimpse of the different faces of "communist death", imagined as "assumed death", "egalitarian death", or exemplary (i.e., heroic) death. In fact, this was really the death of individuality. The goal of this study was achieved through transdisciplinary methodologies, which involve the specific tools of social investigation, interconnected disciplines (see political history, political, cultural and funerary anthropology, social psychology, art and architecture history), through convergent usage of historical sources specific to recent history (official documents, newspapers of the Stalinist period, memory literature, ethnographic sources, funerary inscriptions, interviews). The aim is to present the operations involved in the ideologization of death, a process demanded by "the hunger for legitimacy" of the communist system.