Which socialism, whose détente?

Titel: Which socialism, whose détente? : West European communism and the Czechoslovak crisis, 1968 / Maud Bracke
Verfasser:
Veröffentlicht: Budapest [u.a.] : CEU Press, 2007
Umfang: 414 S.
Format: Buch
Sprache: Englisch
RVK-Notation:
Schlagworte:
ISBN: 9637326944 ; 9789637326943
Lokale Klassifikation: 22 7 O ; 22 7 Od ; 1 7 Mk ; 31 7 Mk
  • Acknowledgements
  • p. vii
  • Introduction
  • p. 01
  • Chapter 1
  • West European Communism and Internationalism Theoretical and Analytical Framework
  • p. 05
  • 1
  • Internationalism and West European communism in the literature
  • p. 05
  • 2
  • The concepts and the method
  • p. 13
  • 3
  • The Czechoslovak crisis in the longer term
  • p. 25
  • 4
  • Introducing the contexts
  • p. 31
  • Part I
  • West European Communism and Internationalism, 1956-1967
  • p. 47
  • Chapter 2
  • West European Communism and the Changes of 1956
  • p. 49
  • 1
  • 1956
  • p. 49
  • 2
  • The PCI and PCF in the post-1956 communist world
  • p. 57
  • 3
  • The PCI, the PCF and changes in internationalism, 1956-1962
  • p. 62
  • Chapter 3
  • West European Communism and Internationalism 1962-1967
  • p. 83
  • 1
  • The communist world: the Sino-Soviet dispute and diversification
  • p. 84
  • 2
  • East-West relations and the rise of European detente
  • p. 92
  • 3
  • The PCI: the symmetry of domestic and international developments
  • p. 101
  • 4
  • The PCF: the asymmetry of domestic and international developments
  • p. 110
  • Conclusions to Part I
  • p. 129
  • Part II
  • The Prague Spring, the Invasion, the Dissent
  • p. 131
  • Chapter 4
  • West European communism and the Prague Spring: reform and detente
  • p. 133
  • 1
  • The Prague Spring: which socialism?
  • p. 133
  • 2
  • Responses in the communist world
  • p. 142
  • 3
  • The PCF: saving "communist unity"
  • p. 148
  • 4
  • The PCI: supporting reform
  • p. 167
  • Concluding remarks
  • p. 180
  • Chapter 5
  • Invasion, Dissent, Crisis
  • p. 197
  • 1
  • The invasion of Czechoslovakia
  • p. 198
  • 2
  • The aftermath and the "normalization"
  • p. 203
  • 3
  • The dissent
  • p. 209
  • 4
  • The politics of identity: party crisis and domestic tension
  • p. 223
  • Concluding remarks
  • p. 231
  • Chapter 6
  • Normalization and Realignment
  • p. 241
  • 1
  • Individual realignment
  • p. 242
  • 2
  • The realignment of the communist world after Czechoslovakia
  • p. 254
  • Concluding remarks
  • p. 264
  • Part III
  • Internationalism After Czechoslovakia
  • p. 273
  • Chapter 7
  • Resetting Internationalism 1969-1970
  • p. 275
  • 1
  • The PCI
  • p. 276
  • 2
  • The PCF
  • p. 294
  • Chapter 8
  • Internationalism and Eurocommunism in the 1970s
  • p. 323
  • 1
  • The enduring problem of European strategy
  • p. 325
  • 2
  • The coming about and break-up of Eurocommunism
  • p. 341
  • Conclusions to Part III
  • p. 361
  • General Conclusions: Internationalism, Detente, Revolution
  • p. 365
  • Abbreviations
  • p. 373
  • Annex 1
  • Membership figures for the PCI and PCF, 1956-1979
  • p. 375
  • Annex 2
  • Electoral results for the PCI and PCF (per cent), 1956-1979
  • p. 376
  • Primary sources
  • p. 377
  • Bibliography
  • p. 379
  • Index
  • p. 405