How is Europe identified in narratives from its eastern periphery? This is the core question of this volume. Its chapters map narratives of Europe rooted in East Europe, as they circulate in phenomenological philosophy, news journalism, social movements, literary texts, visual art and popular music. Whereas debate and research on European identity is normally conducted in self-congratulatory terms by core institutions in the centre, the focus here is on how Europeanness is narrated in one of its most dynamic regions: Eastern Europe. A closer scrutiny of how such East European narratives critically rework inherited conceptions reveals a range of strategies for interpreting European identity in this transitory phase of history.
Open Access PDF of this title is available from OAPEN, at this link Europe Faces Europe.
How is Europe identified in narratives from its eastern periphery? This is the core question of this volume. Its chapters map narratives of Europe rooted in East Europe, as they circulate in phenomenological philosophy, news journalism, social movements, literary texts, visual art and popular music. Whereas debate and research on European identity is normally conducted in self-congratulatory terms by core institutions in the centre, the focus here is on how Europeanness is narrated in one of its most dynamic regions: Eastern Europe. A closer scrutiny of how such East European narratives critically rework inherited conceptions reveals a range of strategies for interpreting European identity in this transitory phase of history.
Open Access PDF of this title is available from OAPEN, at this link Europe Faces Europe.
Europe Faces Europe: An Introduction
Johan Fornäs Europe as Identity and Ideal: Reading Barroso's
'New Narrative' Heretically alongside Hegel, Husserl and Patočka
Carl Cederberg Clashing Internationalisms: East European
Narratives of West European Integration
Stefan Jonsson Narratives at War: Representations of Europe
in News Media of Ukraine, Russia and Poland during Euromaidan
Roman Horbyk Narrating Protest: Silenced Stories of Europe
in Occupy Stockholm and Occupy Latvia
Anna Kaun The Resilience of the Periphery: Narrating Europe
through the Curatorial Strategies
Katerina Wadstein MacLeod Euro-Visions: East European
Narratives in Televised Popular Music
Johan Fornäs
Johan Fornäs is professor in the Department of Media and Communication Studies in the School for Culture and Education at Södertörn University, Sweden. His previous books include Digital Borderlands, Consuming Media, and Signifying Europe, the last of which was published by Intellect Books.
'A welcome contribution to the field of European Studies. The main
strength of the book is contextualization and rich interpretation
of several less known, non-banal and fascinating cases that may
become a real eye-opener for everyone keen on learning more about
Europe’s eastern half. [...] It deserves much credit for its
methodological effort, critical insights and thoughtful analysis of
the selected cases. It suggests a step in the right direction, as
the reader is eventually urged to reflect on how we see, portray
and interpret Europe in the changing global conditions.'
*Eleonora Narvselius, European History Quarterly*
'The universal narrative of Europe, reinforced by the institutional
structures of the EU,
remains a powerful and centralising statement of Europeanness.
Institutionalised EU
narratives, however, especially the requirement for acquiescence to
EU directives and regulation, must be seen as separated from
European idealism and universalism. A complicated
interpretation/ordering of these values through complex mediated
narration shape eastern and western European identity formation and
challenges the EU, and thus the successful notion of a (EU)ropean
demos. Counter narratives, especially in the notion of
Russian/Eurasian perspectives, a reaction to the EU itself, present
alternative futures and geo-political diversity in the
interpretation of what it is to be an (east) European. Though
sometimes jargonistic, the chapters make worthy contributions to a
much debated phenomenon: what it is to be European.'
*Michael Mannin, Slavic Review Spring 2019*
'Six captivating stories of vice and virtue, of villains, victims
and victors sharing the same central character – Europe – are
critically examined in the pages of this book. The East’s tale of
the West; the periphery’s scrutiny of the centre through the lenses
of philosophy, art, journalism and popular music capture the image
of a community still in search of its soul, a culture whose
internal Other is simultaneously a source of disquiet and
productive self-reflection. This is an excellent thinking guide for
today’s Europe whose narratives are filled with suspense and the
happy end is far out of sight.'
*Maria Bakardjieva, Professor of Communication, University of
Calgary, Canada*
'The book offers a brilliant multi-disciplinary, cross-platform
analysis of the new European master narrative and the view of
Europe as a symbolic universe. The book is a major contribution to
the fields of European studies and cultural studies as well as
research on transnationalism.'
*Dr Vlad Strukov, Associate Professor in Film and Digital Culture,
University of Leeds*
'Narratives matter, as the European Commission knows well. But some
narratives are more dominant than others, leaving voices on the
periphery unheard and their motives poorly understood. The essays
collected in Europe Faces Europe offer a powerful
counter-narrative, revealing the competing and even paradoxical
notions of Europe that emerge from the Balkans to the Baltics.
Identities and points of view are necessarily dynamic, relational,
and slippery things; but in this collection, they take tangible
form in the authors’ analyses of such sites as art exhibitions, the
Occupy movement, and the Eurovision Song Contest. Europe Faces
Europe offers a penetrating and timely twist to default notions of
Europe by exploring how it is identified in narratives from its
Eastern half. And in the process, it wonderfully demonstrates the
forensic power of cultural analysis.'
*William Uricchio, Professor of Comparative Media Studies, MIT,
USA, and Professor of Comparative Media History, Utrecht
University, The Netherlands*
'This well designed and coherent set of studies explores various
views from Eastern Europe directed at the continent as a whole, and
especially at the EU, and the East European gaze is anything but
uncritical. Centred around Fornäs’ explanation of the concepts of
narrative and identity as applied to Europe, this collection
contains many valuable insights into the big questions about
Europe: what it is, what it means, where it is going, what it
stands for. And there is of course no one set of answers. But this
book brings some order to the bewildering diversity of narratives
of Europe from the East. It deserves a place in every academic
library.'
*Michael Wintle, Professor and head of the Department of European
Studies, University of Amsterdam*
'Instead of focusing on particular geopolitical mapping, the book
centers on the peripherality of European voices. While no study
dealing with European identities and ideas can formulate a single
and monolithic Europeanness, Europe faces Europe aims to scrutinize
the plurality of European identifications. Although the book’s
emphasis on the plurality of voices represents nothing new as such,
it is certainly relevant given the politically acute tension that
prevails between Brussels-centered unifying ideals and Europe’s
peripheral narratives.'
*Jussi Lassila, Baltic Worlds*
'Europe Faces Europe is a meticulous study of broadly understood
media narratives of Eastern Europe in the context of the region's
European identification. The book is the result of a research
project conducted at Södertörn University, Sweden, involving six
scholars headed by Johan Fornäs, a professor in the Department of
Media and Communication Studies there. Each scholar contributes a
separate study pertaining to a specific media or narrative problem,
such as the news media, protest movements or high art, among
others, with Fornäs writing the introductory chapter as well as his
own study, which, albeit focusing on a specific problem in popular
culture, is broadest in scope.'
*Christopher Garbowski, The Polish Review*
'The volume’s most original contribution […] is probably the
persuasive conclusions it is able to draw by systematically
synthesizing each of these chapters’ findings about narrative: they
are stronger when many fields can speak with one voice.'
*Catherine Baker, The Slavonic and East European Review*
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