Summary
Contents
Subject index
This broad-ranging and interdisciplinary text offers a rich overview of political and cultural identity. Changes across the political landscape from the fall of the Berlin Wall to the recent Islamic revival have profoundly altered the received ideas that define political cultures throughout the world. In this context, Peter W. Preston draws together diverse strands of literature to throw light on the impact on identity of a changing global environment. The book offers a helpful analysis of political, cultural, and economic identity, which lies at the center of individual actions and social structure. This analysis is fleshed out by a detailed examination of specific regional cases, including the realignment of Europe, the sharp rise of Pacific Asia, and the Americas after NAFTA. This unique blend of cultural theory and political analysis offers important and fascinating insights, making Political/Cultural Identity invaluable reading for students and academics across political, social, and cultural studies.
Changing Political-Cultural Identities in Europe
Changing Political-Cultural Identities in Europe
In the post-Second World War period the peoples, organizations and government machines of Europe understood themselves within the overall framework of global bipolarity. In Eastern Europe matters were cast in terms of the achievement of a socialist polity and the sphere was ordered from Moscow. In Western Europe matters were understood in terms of the notion of the free world, and the sphere was ordered from Washington. All the other areas of the world were either assimilated to this model as allies or clients of one or other bloc, or read as marginal, as in the case of the newly independent countries of the former European and American colonial empires. However, the collapse of the cold-war ...
- Loading...