The Hidden Handshake: National Identity and Europe in the Post-Communist World
By (Author) Ale Debeljak
Translated by Ale Debeljak
Translated by Rawley Grau
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
27th September 2004
United States
General
Non Fiction
Reference, Information and Interdisciplinary subjects
306.2094
Paperback
138
Width 149mm, Height 231mm, Spine 11mm
209g
The Hidden Handshake uses four distinct, yet intertwined essays to address the questions surrounding our notions of citizenship, national identity, and cosmopolitan belonging. The violent disintegration of Yugoslavia and the undercurrent of EU enlargement stand out as two contrasting movements that highlight the importance of having a national identification while also defying it to avoid both the rigidity of nationalist exclusivism and the blithe nonsense of global citizenship.
the book is full of interesting insights into the human condition of multiple identities... * H-Net: Humanities and Social Science Reviews Online *
A passionate, poignantly argued, and elegantly written contribution to the ongoing debate on the major cultural and political tensions in post-Cold War Europe. In a remarkably nuanced way, Debeljak proposes an original alternative to both atomizing individualism and stifling collectivism. Lucidly situated between memory and yearning, this book is a thought-provoking manifesto for diversity, tolerance, and an inclusive liberal vision of patriotism. -- Vladimir Tismaneanu, University of Maryland, author of Stalinism for All Seasons: A Political History * University Of Maryland *
At once cosmopolitan and impassioned, lucid and lyrical, Ale Debeljak is the perfect philosopher of the new dispensation. His sense of history is deep and considered, his cultural intuitions are astute, and his balanced prose is a delight. These essays come at us bearing the gifts of educated sensibility. -- Sven Birkerts * Harvard University *
Ale Debeljak, one of the leading Central European poets and public intellectuals, gives an intriguing account of the historical and societal forces shaping the cultures of the European East in the context of EU enlargement. But he looks to the future as well, making an original and elegantly wrought plea for concentric circles of identity to encompass the multitude of overlapping identities that is contemporary Europe. Here is that rare bird: a social thinker who writes with passion and panache. -- Michael Henry Heim * University Of California, Los Angeles *
An outward expression of deeply held and felt anxieties concerning how one should try and find their place in the world around them. It is poetry in prose and, as such, a relaxing read that invites each of its readers to look deep inside themselves to discover what Debeljak has already dicovered for himself. * Journal of International Relations and Development *
By birth, nationality, and education, no one could be better qualified that the author to discuss the emergence of Slovenian patriotism and nationalism in competition and confrontation with Yugoslavism as nurtured by royal Yugoslavia, Titoism, and their descendents. All of this is masterfully debated, keeping an eye on the long- and short-range historical background, including President Wilson's demolition of Mitteleuropa at Versailles with its many unforseen consequences. * Choice Reviews *
Ale_ Debeljak is the director of the Center for Cultural and Religious Studies at the School of Social Sciences, University of Ljubljana, Slovenia.