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Toward a Critique of Post-Communist Reason

Class at Faculty of Arts |
APOV50440

This text is not available in the current language. Showing version "cs".Syllabus

Week 1 (3. 10. 2023) The End of Post-Communism?

Optional reading: Vojtěch Šeliga, “S prohrou Babiše skončí postkomunismus, řekl Lacina. Juchelka se mu vysmál do obličeje” (https://cnn.iprima.cz/prohra-babise-bude-konec-postkomunismu-rika-lacina-jako-zeman-a-klaus-ma-vazby-na-rusko-193474) This short article is only optional, for Czech readers. In class we’ll discuss the article’s content.  

Week 2 (10. 10.) Yet Another Light that Failed?

Reading: Selections from Ivan Krastev and Stephen Holmes, The Light That Failed: A Reckoning  

Week 3 (17. 10.) The End of History I

            Reading: Selections from Francis Fukuyama, The End of History and the Last Man  

Week 4 (24. 10.) The End of History II

Reading: Prozorov, The Ethics of Postcommunism, ch. 1, “Universal Postcommunism: Kojève and Agamben”  

Week 5 (31. 10.) The Grand New Idea I: Civil Society

            Reading: Ernest Gellner, Conditions of Liberty, chs. 1, 24, and 28  

Week 6 (31. 10.) The Grand New Idea II: Moral (Anti-)Politics

Reading: Selections from Václav Havel, The Art of the Impossible: Politics as Morality in Practice  

Week 7 (7. 11.) The Other Side of Civil Society

Reading: Veronika Stoyanova, “The Concept of Civil Society during the ‘Transition’”  

Week 8 (14. 11.) The Other Side of Morality

Reading: Georgi Medarov, “The Roots of the Moralization of Politics in Post-1989 Bulgaria and What It Means for the Left”  

Week 9 (21. 11.) The Wild East and the Ideal of “Transition”

            Reading: Selections from Lea Ypi, Free  

Week 10 (28. 11.) The Political Economy of Shock Therapy

Reading: Ghodsee and Orenstein, Taking Stock of Shock, ch. 4, “Counternarratives of Catastrophe”  

Week 11 (5. 12.) Old Elites, New Elites

Reading: Eyal, et al., Making Capitalism without Capitalists, ch. 2, “The Second Bildungsbürgertum”  

Week 12 (12. 12.) The East Needs Help

Reading: Boris Buden, “Children of Postcommunism” Note: For readers of German, Buden’s full book was originally published as Die Zone des Übergangs: Vom Ende des Postkommunismus. For readers of Czech, the book has been translated as Konec postkomunismu?  

Week 13 (19. 12.) The East Still Isn’t West

            Reading: Selections from Ivan Kalmar, White but Not Quite  

Week 14 (9. 1. 2024): Informal meeting

No reading this week. We’ll meet after hours for an open discussion (time and place TBA)  

This text is not available in the current language. Showing version "cs".Annotation

In the years following the Communist Party’s loss of monopoly power in Central and Eastern Europe, a new social, political, and cultural order came into being, known colloquially as “post-socialism” or “post-communism.” Entirely new ways of organizing the economy, political power, and expressive culture not only became dominant, but came to appear natural, unquestionable, justified by the apparent impossibility or illegitimacy of doing things any other way. Eventually the homogeneity of legitimate approaches began to break down, and some commentators have suggested that the post-communist period had already ended, giving way to something new.

But the post-communist legacy continues to affect our present, and the types of thought cultivated by post-communism continue to influence contemporary society and politics. In this course we will examine and problematize some of those types of thought – the tenets of what I’ve called “post-communist reason” – as we attempt to understand the phenomenon of post-communism and the open question of what comes after it.