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Central Europe: Enemies, Neighbors, Friends
Throughout the Cold War era, the Iron Curtain divided Central Europe into a Communist East and a democratic West, and we grew accustomed to looking at this part of the world in bipolar ideological terms. Yet many people living on both sides of the Iron Curtain considered themselves Central Europeans, and the idea of Central Europe was one of the driving forces behind the revolutionary year of 1989 as well as the deterioration of Yugoslavia and its ensuing wars. Central Europe provides a broad overview and comparative analysis of key events in a historical region that encompasses contemporary Germany, Poland, the Czech Republic, Slovakia, Austria, Hungary, Slovenia, and Croatia. Starting with the initial conversion of the "pagan" peoples of the region to Christianity around 1000 A.D. and concluding with the revolutions of 1989 and the problems of post-Communist states today, it illuminates the distinctive nature and peculiarities of the historical development of this region as a cohesive whole. Lonnie R. Johnson introduces readers to Central Europe's heritage of diversity, the interplay of its cultures, and the origins of its malicious ethnic and national conflicts. History in Central Europe, he shows, has been epic and tragic. Throughout the ages, small nations struggled valiantly against a series of imperial powers--Ottoman Turkey, Habsburg Austria, imperial Germany, czarist Russia, Nazi Germany, and the Soviet Union--and they lost regularly. Johnson's account is present-minded in the best sense: in describing actual historical events, he illustrates the ways they have been remembered, and how they contribute to the national assumptions that still drive European politics today. Indeed, the constant interplay of reality and myth--the processes of myth-making and remembrance--animates much of this history. Since the fall of the Iron Curtain in 1989, the unanticipated problems of transforming post-Communist states into democracies with market economies, the wars in the former Yugoslavia, and the challenges of European integration have all made Central Europe the most dynamic and troubled region in Europe. In Central Europe, Johnson combines a vivid and panoramic narrative of events, a nuanced analysis of social, economic, and political developments, and a thoughtful portrait of those myths and memories that have lives of their own--and consequences for all of Europe.
- From: Amazon
- Posted: Jan-15-2008
Excellent historical survey
This is one of the best, perhaps the best, survey or overview history of a region that I have read. (Central Europe -- at least as Lonnie Johnson defines and writes about it -- comprehends Germany, Poland, the Czech Republic, Slovakia, Austria, Hungary, Slovenia, Croatia and, further to the east...
Read full review | Report as inappropriate- From: Amazon
- Posted: Apr-16-2006
Well Written, Well Research, Well Presented
This is not your easy read pseudo-historiography. This is a very well research (and notated) academic presentation of a singularly dismissed subject. (Not in the sense of being written off as more of just being ignored.) Beginning with the earliest available evidence of how different tribes...
Read full review | Report as inappropriate- From: Amazon
- Posted: Feb-26-2006
The best history of Central Europe for the general reader
This is easily the best history of Central Europe available for the general reader (or the student). Johnson always keeps the big picture in mind, while moving the reader though events and people that are unfamiliar to most Americans.Johnson has organized the material to do what you probably...
Read full review | Report as inappropriate- From: Amazon
- Posted: Dec-27-2003
Superb Background Study for understanding Central Europe
~Central Europe: Enemies, Neighbors, and Friends~ is an amazing background history on Central and Eastern Europe. Lonnie Johnson chronicles central European historical developments, whether cultural, political and socio-economic, after the fall of Rome and the rise of the Christian West. Central...
Read full review | Report as inappropriate- From: Amazon
- Posted: Feb-24-2000
A must for the serious student of Central European politics
Before coming and working in the Balkans, I taught European political-military affairs and history, and this has got to be one of the best books on the subject for an American audience. Lonnie Johnson is an American academic who has lived many years in Austria and has an Austrian wife, so his...
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- Posted: Oct-24-1997
An excellent synthesis of a misunderstood region.
This book is being used as a supplemental reading in a seminar class in Eastern Europe. Johnson, as the third generation of Slavic historians, has written an easy to read, well documented, and scholarly work. His theses are easy to comprehend, and he makes the region, politics, and ethnic...
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