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New Eastern Europe Magazine 3 (XII) 2014: OUR (R)EVOLUTIONS Back Issue

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7 Reviews   •  English   •   General Interest (History & Knowledge)
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The July-August 2014 issue of New Eastern Europe is our first issue as a bimonthly magazine. It is also a special issue as it celebrates the 25 year anniversary of the fall of communism in the countries of Central Europe. Above all, this issue not only reflects on the 25 years of peaceful evolution that have taken place in Poland, but it links this discussion with the revolution that has taken place Ukraine.

In an exclusive interview with New Eastern Europe, Poland’s former president, Lech Wałęsa, admits that he was a destroyer but failed at building. His confession is followed by a portrait of Tadeusz Mazowiecki, a builder of the new Poland. In his recollections from 1989, Aleksander Hall makes a realistic assessment writing that “Mazowiecki started his mission to build democracy in a situation where practically the entire state apparatus was still rooted in the previous system.”

Freedom prevailed in many of the countries of the former Soviet bloc after 1989. However, as Krzysztof Czyżewski observes, “We needed time to understand that without equality and fraternity, freedom brings enslavement.” His view is confirmed by Shana Penn, who writes that in Poland: “The forestalled equal rights issues never got their fair due in the wake of Solidarity’s victory.”

The reflections on the last 25 years in Poland are followed by essays from a new generation of writers and journalists. Essays by the region’s young voices in countries like Romania, Ukraine and Georgia, illustrate the cautious optimism that is felt in this new generation.

Essays and analysis on Ukraine by Mykola Riabchuk, Milan Lelich, Jakub Parusinski, Paweł Pięniążek and Roman Kabichiy assess the situation in this context as well and gives the reader deeper insight into those issues which still remain unresolved in Ukraine.
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New Eastern Europe

3 (XII) 2014: OUR (R)EVOLUTIONS The July-August 2014 issue of New Eastern Europe is our first issue as a bimonthly magazine. It is also a special issue as it celebrates the 25 year anniversary of the fall of communism in the countries of Central Europe. Above all, this issue not only reflects on the 25 years of peaceful evolution that have taken place in Poland, but it links this discussion with the revolution that has taken place Ukraine. In an exclusive interview with New Eastern Europe, Poland’s former president, Lech Wałęsa, admits that he was a destroyer but failed at building. His confession is followed by a portrait of Tadeusz Mazowiecki, a builder of the new Poland. In his recollections from 1989, Aleksander Hall makes a realistic assessment writing that “Mazowiecki started his mission to build democracy in a situation where practically the entire state apparatus was still rooted in the previous system.” Freedom prevailed in many of the countries of the former Soviet bloc after 1989. However, as Krzysztof Czyżewski observes, “We needed time to understand that without equality and fraternity, freedom brings enslavement.” His view is confirmed by Shana Penn, who writes that in Poland: “The forestalled equal rights issues never got their fair due in the wake of Solidarity’s victory.” The reflections on the last 25 years in Poland are followed by essays from a new generation of writers and journalists. Essays by the region’s young voices in countries like Romania, Ukraine and Georgia, illustrate the cautious optimism that is felt in this new generation. Essays and analysis on Ukraine by Mykola Riabchuk, Milan Lelich, Jakub Parusinski, Paweł Pięniążek and Roman Kabichiy assess the situation in this context as well and gives the reader deeper insight into those issues which still remain unresolved in Ukraine.


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New Eastern Europe  |  3 (XII) 2014: OUR (R)EVOLUTIONS  


The July-August 2014 issue of New Eastern Europe is our first issue as a bimonthly magazine. It is also a special issue as it celebrates the 25 year anniversary of the fall of communism in the countries of Central Europe. Above all, this issue not only reflects on the 25 years of peaceful evolution that have taken place in Poland, but it links this discussion with the revolution that has taken place Ukraine.

In an exclusive interview with New Eastern Europe, Poland’s former president, Lech Wałęsa, admits that he was a destroyer but failed at building. His confession is followed by a portrait of Tadeusz Mazowiecki, a builder of the new Poland. In his recollections from 1989, Aleksander Hall makes a realistic assessment writing that “Mazowiecki started his mission to build democracy in a situation where practically the entire state apparatus was still rooted in the previous system.”

Freedom prevailed in many of the countries of the former Soviet bloc after 1989. However, as Krzysztof Czyżewski observes, “We needed time to understand that without equality and fraternity, freedom brings enslavement.” His view is confirmed by Shana Penn, who writes that in Poland: “The forestalled equal rights issues never got their fair due in the wake of Solidarity’s victory.”

The reflections on the last 25 years in Poland are followed by essays from a new generation of writers and journalists. Essays by the region’s young voices in countries like Romania, Ukraine and Georgia, illustrate the cautious optimism that is felt in this new generation.

Essays and analysis on Ukraine by Mykola Riabchuk, Milan Lelich, Jakub Parusinski, Paweł Pięniążek and Roman Kabichiy assess the situation in this context as well and gives the reader deeper insight into those issues which still remain unresolved in Ukraine.
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Articles in this issue


Below is a selection of articles in New Eastern Europe 3 (XII) 2014: OUR (R)EVOLUTIONS.