Vienna Humanities Festival 2019
Pavel Barša in conversation with Ludger Hagedorn
September 29, Wien Museum
How could it be that Central Europe, the region that birthed the anti-communist liberal utopia of the 1970s and 80s, has turned illiberal, anti-immigrant and nationalistic today? Is this a paradox or an outcome of the very same ideology that fueled the anti-totalitarian movement? Renowned Czech political scientist Pavel Barša finds the roots of today’s anti-universalist turn in Central Europe in the very liberal ideology that brought about the velvet revolutions. In a conversation with IWM Permanent Fellow Ludger Hagedorn, he explains his provocative thesis.
Pavel Barša in conversation with Ludger Hagedorn
September 29, Wien Museum
How could it be that Central Europe, the region that birthed the anti-communist liberal utopia of the 1970s and 80s, has turned illiberal, anti-immigrant and nationalistic today? Is this a paradox or an outcome of the very same ideology that fueled the anti-totalitarian movement? Renowned Czech political scientist Pavel Barša finds the roots of today’s anti-universalist turn in Central Europe in the very liberal ideology that brought about the velvet revolutions. In a conversation with IWM Permanent Fellow Ludger Hagedorn, he explains his provocative thesis.
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