Record ID | marc_columbia/Columbia-extract-20221130-005.mrc:196113011:5405 |
Source | marc_columbia |
Download Link | /show-records/marc_columbia/Columbia-extract-20221130-005.mrc:196113011:5405?format=raw |
LEADER: 05405fam a2200421 a 4500
001 2145022
005 20220615214127.0
008 950203s1996 nyu b 000 0 eng
010 $a 95005924
020 $a0195094476 :$c$35.00
020 $a0195094468 (pbk.) :$c$16.95
035 $a(OCoLC)32049530
035 $a(OCoLC)ocm32049530
035 $9ANK5455CU
035 $a(NNC)2145022
035 $a2145022
040 $aDLC$cDLC$dDLC$dOrLoB-B
043 $aee-----
050 00 $aDJK50$b.F76 1996
082 00 $a947.08$220
245 00 $aFrom Stalinism to pluralism :$ba documentary history of Eastern Europe since 1945 /$cedited by Gale Stokes.
250 $a2nd ed.
260 $aNew York :$bOxford University Press,$c1996.
300 $a294 pages ;$c25 cm
336 $atext$btxt$2rdacontent
337 $aunmediated$bn$2rdamedia
504 $aIncludes bibliographical references.
505 20 $gI.$tThe Stalinist Moment.$g1.$tReport of the Crimea Conference (Yalta).$g2.$tThe Yalta Negotiations /$rCharles E. Bohlen.$g3.$tPoland at the Teheran Conference /$rCharles E. Bohlen.$g4.$tThe Percentages Agreement /$rWinston S. Churchill.$g5.$tThe Truman Doctrine /$rHarry S. Truman.$g6.$tThe Two-Camp Policy /$rAndrei Zhdanov.$g7.$tThe Case for Stalinism /$rJakub Berman.$g8.$tKetman /$rCzeslaw Milosz.$g9.$tThe Tito-Stalin Correspondence.$g10.$tThe Trial of Laszlo Rajk.$g11.$tThe Slansky Trial --$gII.$tThe Marxist Critique.$g12.$tReform Communism /$rImre Nagy.$g13.$tContemporary Problems of Marxist Philosophy /$rGyorgy Lukacs.$g14.$tThe Origins of Self-Management in Yugoslavia /$rMilovan Djilas.$g15.$tThe Challenge of Self-Management.$g16.$tThe New Class /$rMilovan Djilas.$g17.$tThe Kuron-Modzelewski Open Letter to the Party /$rJacek Kuron and Karol Modzelewski.$g18.$tThe Praxis Group /$rMihailo Markovic.$g19.$tTowards a Democratic Political Organization of Society /$rZdenek Mlynar.
505 80 $g20.$tTwo Thousand Words to Workers, Farmers, Scientists, Artists, and Everyone /$rLudvik Vaculik.$g21.$tThe Brezhnev Doctrine /$rLeonid Brezhnev --$gIII.$tAntipolitics and the Retreat to Ethics.$g22.$tThe Debate of the Clerks /$rLeszek Kolakowski.$g23.$tIntellectuals as a Class /$rGyorgy Konrad and Ivan Szelenyi.$g24.$tA Nation Which Cannot Take Itself for Granted /$rMilan Kundera.$g25.$tOstpolitik /$rWilly Brandt.$g26.$tThe Helsinki Accords.$g27.$tCharter 77.$g28.$tThe Power of the Powerless /$rVaclav Havel.$g29.$tAntipolitics /$rGyorgy Konrad --$gIV.$tThe Return of Politics.$g30.$tSoft Budget Constraints /$rJanos Kornai.$g31.$tEnvironmental Concerns in Poland /$rSabine Rosenbladt.$g32.$tKOR's Appeal to Society.$g33.$tPope John Paul II Speaks in Victory Square, Warsaw /$rPope John Paul II.̃$g34.$tThe Gdansk Agreement.$g35.$tSolidarity's Program.$g36.$tJaruzelski Declares Martial Law /$rWojciech Jaruzelski.$g37.$tThe Tragedy of Central Europe /$rMilan Kundera.
505 80 $g38.$tLetter from Gdansk Prison /$rAdam Michnik.$g39.$tA Solidarity Government Takes Power /$rTadeusz Mazowiecki.$g40.$tA New Social Contract /$rJanos Kis, Ferenc Koszeg and Ottilia Solt.$g41.$tThe Third Way /$rIvan Szelenyi.$g42.$tThe Opening of the Berlin Wall /$rCraig R. Whitney, David Binder and Serge Schmemann.$g43.$tNew Year's Day Speech, 1990 /$rVaclav Havel --$gV.$tAfter the Fall.$g44.$tPatriotism: A Vital Necessity /$rIon Lancranjan.$g45.$tName Changes in Bulgaria /$rStanko Todorov.$g46.$tA Few Thoughts /$rIstvan Csurka.$g47.$tEsteemed Compatriots /$rZhelyu Zhelev.$g48.$tMemorandum of the Serbian Academy of Sciences (SANU).$g49.$tThe Slovene National Question /$rDimitrij Rupel.$g50.$tThe Constitution of the Republic of Croatia.$g51.$tHuman Rights in Bosnia and Herzegovina /$rHaris Silajdzic.$g52.$tA Common European Home /$rMikhail Gorbachev.$g53.$tWe Opened Ourselves to the World /$rMikhail Gorbachev.
520 $aBringing together a wealth of historical documents, memoirs, essays, and literature from Eastern Europe, this highly successful book vividly illustrates how the most original and challenging minds of the region have understood and reacted to Stanlinism and its successors since the end of the Second World War, ultimately showing how Eastern Europeans have made the journey from Stalinism to a new pluralism.
520 8 $aThe book creates a rich mosaic of political and historical development in these countries, presenting extracts from the works of Leszek Kolakowski, Czeslaw Milosz, Milovan Djilas, Gyorgy Lukacs, Vaclav Havel, Adam Michnik, and Gyorgy Konrad alongside such seminal primary documents as the Yalta Agreement, the Helsinki Accords, and the Gdansk Agreement.
520 8 $aOrganized chronologically and thematically, a fifth chapter, entitled "After the Fall," has been added to create a completely updated and expanded second edition. The new edition covers the critical events attending the rise of Stalinism and the fall of communism in Eastern Europe.
520 8 $aFour new readings on the collapse of Yugoslavia into civil war, as well as close to fifty other documents make this reader the most comprehensive and up-to-date reader on the history and politics of Eastern Europe since the end of World War II.
651 0 $aEurope, Eastern$xHistory$y1945-1989$vSources.
700 1 $aStokes, Gale,$d1933-2012.$0http://id.loc.gov/authorities/names/n83177584
852 00 $bleh$hDJK50$i.F76 1996
852 00 $bglx$hDJK50$i.F76 1996