Albanija i albanskite identicnosti: Izsledvanija = Albania and the Albanian identities
In: Sadbata na mjusjulmanskite obstnosti na Balkanite, 5
In: Poredica Imir, 13
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In: Sadbata na mjusjulmanskite obstnosti na Balkanite, 5
In: Poredica Imir, 13
World Affairs Online
In: Mezinárodní vztahy: Czech journal of international relations, Band 44, Heft 1, S. 118-122
ISSN: 0543-7989, 0323-1844
In: Kataloge des Österreichischen Museums für Volkskunde 84
In: Sociologický časopis / Czech Sociological Review, Band 41, Heft 1, S. 184-187
ISSN: 2570-6578
In: Politologický časopis, Band 13, Heft 3, S. 306-317
ISSN: 1211-3247
The article deals with the concept of the advantage of "backwardness" and its use in comparative research on European parties and party systems. Politics in the "post-Rokkanian" world, characterized by de-aligning patterns of interest representation and intermediation, raises new questions and challenges in the field of research on political parties, pressure groups, and social movements. The text poses questions that should be asked in regard to this "post-Rokkanian" transformation of political processes connected to the opening of new research perspectives on multilevel party competition in European countries. The article elaborates the concept of the advantage of backwardness at three main levels: the organizational patterns of internal life within political parties, party systems, and interest intermediation systems generally. The article also tries to put the whole concept of the advantage of backwardness into the proper geopolitical and historical area in the framework of European countries. Adapted from the source document.
This article aims to tease out the transformation of communist identity and the sense of legitimacy within the ruling parties of the Eastern Bloc (particularly Poland, Czechoslovakia and the GDR) in 1956. It explores how communist identity was negotiated and reshaped beyond the highest level of party leadership and prominent communist intellectuals and how ordinary party members perceived this ideological turnabout. It seeks to demonstrate how the sense of belonging was articulated in the reflection of the parties' recent past by ordinary party members on a local level: functionaries, apparatchiks, propagandists and local party historians. In the aftermath of 1956, communist and working class identities were seriously challenged by renewed national, ethnic, confessional or regional identities in a steady process of exclusion and inclusion. Examining the de-Stalinization "from below", the study concludes that despite the earthquake-like ideological upheavals a new form of identity emerged among the parties' rank-and-file that, centered around the parties as an imperfect yet heroic collective, secured the sense of legitimacy for the decades to come.
BASE
ISSN: 1311-2341
ISSN: 1313-1915