1. Central and Eastern Europe and the Idea of the East 2. Central and Eastern Europe in a Center-Periphery Perspective 3. Dependence Doxa: Western Hegemony and its Naturalization in Central and Eastern Europe 4. Intelligentsia Doxa: A Hegemony of the Intelligentsia and its Naturalization 5. Post-colonial Theory in a Central European Context 6. The Kresy (Old Borderlands) Discourse and its Critics 7. The New Borderlands Discourse 8. Constructing New Identities for Eastern Poland 9. Belarussian, Lithuanian and Ukrainian Reactions to Polish Discourses on the East 10. Conclusions: Critical Theory in a Central European Context
Tomasz Zarycki is an Associate Professor and Director of the Robert Zajonc Institute of Social Studies, University of Warsaw, Poland
"A handful of academics have made careers on studying the
borderlands and the bloodlands of Eastern
Europe. But there may be no study more ambitious, comprehensive,
nuanced and theoretically informed
than Zarycki’s thought-provoking journey through them." - Raymond
Taras, University of Sussex, Europe-Asia Studies, Vol. 67, No. 9,
November 2015, 1498–1517
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