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The prospects for liberal nationalism in post-Leninist states / Cheng Chen.

By: Material type: TextTextPublication details: University Park, PA : Pennsylvania State University Press, 2007.Description: 1 online resource (xii, 245 pages) : illustrationsContent type:
  • text
Media type:
  • computer
Carrier type:
  • online resource
ISBN:
  • 9780271034942
  • 0271034947
Subject(s): Genre/Form: Additional physical formats: Print version:: Prospects for liberal nationalism in post-Leninist states.DDC classification:
  • 320.5409171/7 22
LOC classification:
  • JC311 .C4567 2007eb
Online resources:
Contents:
Liberalism, Leninism, and the national question -- Russia : the problem of rising extremism -- China : nationalism with Chinese characteristics -- Romania : legacies of "national Stalinism" -- Hungary : the marginalization of illiberal nationalism -- Conclusion : the prospects for liberal nationalism.
Summary: The fall of communism in the Soviet Union led many to hope and expect that liberal democracy would immediately take root across post-communist states, marking what Francis Fukuyama famously referred to as the "end of history." Since then, however, a very different picture has emerged, most notably in the form of nationalist sentiments that have steered many post-communist countries in an illiberal direction, even in regimes committed to market reforms and formally democratic institutions. Cheng Chen examines this phenomenon in comparative perspective, showing that the different pathways of nation-building under Leninism affected the character of Leninist regimes and, later, the differential prospects for liberal democracy in the post-communist era. In China and Russia, Chen shows, liberalism and nationalism were more difficult to reconcile because Leninism was indigenous and had a more significant impact on nation-building. In Hungary and Romania, by contrast, Leninism was a foreign import and had less of an effect on traditional national identity. As we witness the struggle to establish democracy in places such as Afghanistan and Iraq, a study that examines the salience of historical legacies seems particularly timely
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Includes bibliographical references (pages 217-239) and index.

Liberalism, Leninism, and the national question -- Russia : the problem of rising extremism -- China : nationalism with Chinese characteristics -- Romania : legacies of "national Stalinism" -- Hungary : the marginalization of illiberal nationalism -- Conclusion : the prospects for liberal nationalism.

Print version record.

The fall of communism in the Soviet Union led many to hope and expect that liberal democracy would immediately take root across post-communist states, marking what Francis Fukuyama famously referred to as the "end of history." Since then, however, a very different picture has emerged, most notably in the form of nationalist sentiments that have steered many post-communist countries in an illiberal direction, even in regimes committed to market reforms and formally democratic institutions. Cheng Chen examines this phenomenon in comparative perspective, showing that the different pathways of nation-building under Leninism affected the character of Leninist regimes and, later, the differential prospects for liberal democracy in the post-communist era. In China and Russia, Chen shows, liberalism and nationalism were more difficult to reconcile because Leninism was indigenous and had a more significant impact on nation-building. In Hungary and Romania, by contrast, Leninism was a foreign import and had less of an effect on traditional national identity. As we witness the struggle to establish democracy in places such as Afghanistan and Iraq, a study that examines the salience of historical legacies seems particularly timely

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