In the nationally-conflicted 19th century, Karl
Marx promised that Communism will once and for all put an end to the national
problem, which was nothing more than a bourgeoisie maneuver aimed at “inciting
nations against each other”. The famous slogan Proletarians of all
countries, unite! sounded for many generations of Marx’s followers as the
promise of a bright future, where both social and national oppression shall
seize to exist. The first half of the 20th century saw many
Communist parties take control over societies especially in Central and Eastern Europe, where national conflicts had divided
communities for centuries. It was the revolutionary Communists’ turn to see
their dream fulfilled: the end of national oppression. Some decades later,
though, Socialist states seemed to take the habits of forerunner bourgeois
states.
During the Great Patriotic War, Stalin left aside the
Marxist-Leninist rhetoric in favor of a National discourse meant to mobilize
the Russians against the foreign invader. But later, more and more Communist
Parties assumed nationalist-oriented features and started to envisage national
minorities as threats. Uniformity seemed to be no longer a social, political,
institutional or cultural issue, but it became national as well. Communist
Parties tried to define this mutation in various forms, in order to reconcile
national aspirations with Marxism – or more like it – to hide national
aspirations behind Marxism. Perhaps that was a necessary step in acquiring
legitimacy but, nevertheless, it gave birth to unusual ideological hybrids,
sometimes reaching the limits of Extreme Right, as it happened in Nicolae
Ceausescu’ Romania.
This issue of VJHS intends to investigate such evolutions,
focused mainly on Brezhnev’s years in power, because of the two opposing
factors which acted together: on one hand, the Soviet pressures for limiting
liberalization processes, clearly exemplified by the intervention against the
Prague Spring, and on the other hand, domestic pressures for liberalization,
encouraged greatly by the preliminaries and outcomes of the Conference for
Security and Cooperation in Europe, which sanctioned the respect for human
rights on both sides of the Iron Curtain. Under such opposing factors,
Communist regimes in Central and Eastern Europe
had to adapt, to find solutions to their lack of legitimacy and to answer
social pressures in such manner as to ensure their survival and to prevent
Soviet intervention at the same time.
VJHS awaits papers focused on:
- policies towards national minorities in Socialist states of Europe;
- cultural policies which deliberately neglected the historical inheritance of minorities;
- the impact of restrictive national policies on diplomatic relations among Socialist neighbors;
- the use of Marxist-Leninist ideology in order to explain or justify the national policy;
- pressures from Western governments and organizations aimed at respecting national minorities’ rights, in the aftermath of CSCE of 1975;
- reactions from national minorities, in the form of social and political movements, but also in cultural and ideological form;
- intellectuals’ involvement in these policies, either standing up in defense of minorities and their culture, or justifying nationally-engulfing policies.
Informations
from website Valahian Journal of Historical Studies.
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