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European Journal of Social Theory
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Mitteleuropa and the European Heritage

Ksenija Vidmar-Horvat

UNIVERSITY OF LJUBLJANA, SLOVENIA, ksenija.vidmar{at}ff.uni-lj.si, UNIVERSITY OF SUSSEX, UK

Gerard Delanty

UNIVERSITY OF LJUBLJANA, SLOVENIA, g.delanty{at}sussex.ac.uk, UNIVERSITY OF SUSSEX, UK

The political significance of Mitteleuropa has grown in that much of it is now within the EU. Mitteleuropa is a discourse; it is not just a semantic term or a label to refer to a geopolitical region in which power and culture are interwined. Although people may identify with it, it is not primarily a term of identity but a cultural mode of interpretation. It can be called, along with other concepts of Europe, a conflicting field of interpretation. The concept reflects a civilizational context based on imperial models of modernity and cosmopolitan cultural resonances. Europe is an ongoing cultural battleground and the idea of Mitteleuropa is a reminder of a shift to the margins and the emergence of a multiperspectival Europe along with new notions of geopolitical space and historical-time consciousness.

Key Words: Central Europe • cosmopolitanism • European identity • modernity • Slovenia

European Journal of Social Theory, Vol. 11, No. 2, 203-218 (2008)
DOI: 10.1177/1368431007087474


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