1st Edition

Decolonial Politics in European Peripheries Redefining Progressiveness, Coloniality and Transition Efforts

Edited By Sanja S. Petkovska Copyright 2024
334 Pages 7 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

334 Pages 7 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

334 Pages 7 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

Decolonial Politics in European Peripheries: Redefining Progressiveness, Coloniality and Transition Efforts is a timely contribution to the project of theorizing “Europe” through decolonial perspectives on the Left, as the European and global crisis has prompted new reflections on what it means to sit still at the European “peripheries”. The book explores how the joint scholarship efforts of... Read more

Introduction

Sanja S. Petkovska

Part I: Is There a Way Out of the Boomerang of Postsocialism?

1. Production of Knowledge, Class Struggle, and the Postsocialist Condition

Sven Cvek

2. Conceptualizing the Inequalities in Knowledge Production and Drawing the Prospects for Postsocialist Studies

Sanja S. Petkovska

Part II: Decolonizing Perspectives on Migration and Leftist Politics and Policies

3. Care Extractivism in Migration Flows from Postsocialist to Southern Europe and Care Municipalism as a Decolonizing Project

Angelina Kussy and Łukasz Moll

4. Postsocialist Migration from North Macedonia: The Case of “Work and Travel” Students in the USA. Is the American Dream Still Alive?

Irena Avirovic Bundalevska

5. Neocolonial Migration Policies, EU Resilience, and the Role of Greece: Critique and the Possibility of Alternatives

Costas Gousis and Alkisti Prepi

6. Decolonizing Forced Migration Studies: Notes from Borderlands

Nergis Canefe

Part III: Intersectional Decolonization and a Struggle for Recognition and Empowerment

7. Beyond Multiculturalism: Minority Intellectuals in the Postsocialist Predicament of Southeast Europe

Francesco Trupia

8. “Thank You For Not Attending”: The Relevance of the Issue of Sociocultural Inequalities in the Process of Reforming Cultural Policy in Post-Milošević Serbia

Ivana Vesić

9. “Slaves in Our Country”: Postcolonialism or Neocolonialism? Dynamics of Nationalism in Romania and the Rise of the Populist Right

Valentin Quintus Nicolescu

Part IV: Coming to Terms with the Nation(s) Again

10. Leadership Rent and Patronage in the EU Global Strategy Evolution

Oxana Karnaukhova

11. Conservative Use of Postcolonial Rhetotic: The Polish and Czech Cases

Ondřej Slačálek

12. “Beautiful!!! And a Bit Scary”: The Visitors’ Comments at the Museum of the Macedonian Struggle in Skopje and the Reception of History and Memory Narratives in North Macedonia (2011–2014)

Naum Trajanovski and Ivana Hadjievska

13. From “Air War” to “Partnership for Peace”: NATO’s Relations with Serbia from the Left Perspective

Goran Marković and Ivica Mladenović

Part V: Rethinking the Transition Model and Imagining the Different Future Politics of the Former Socialist Countries

14. No Escape from Coloniality? Comparing Geopolitical (Self-)imagination in the Former Soviet Periphery

Philipp Lottholz and Polina Manolova

15. A Colonial Expedition in the Balkans: Ethnography as Primitive Accumulation During the First World War

Christina Novakov-Ritchey

16. Colonies in Interwar Europe? The Balkan Communist Parties as Precursors of Anticolonialism

Stefan Gužvica

Biography

Sanja S. Petkovska obtained a PhD degree in Cultural Studies from the Faculty of Political Sciences at the University of Belgrade, Serbia, and previous academic degrees in Cultural Sociology and Adult Education from the Faculty of Philosophy at the same university. She works at the Institute of Criminological and Sociological Research in Belgrade, Serbia, as a Research Fellow and her research revolves around the domains of critical theory, human–animal relations, knowledge production, cultural studies, violence, and public policies.