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[ecrea] cfp: Europe Unfinished: EU and the W/Restern Balkans in a Time of Crisis
Fri Apr 11 19:19:05 GMT 2014
Reminder CfP
Europe Unfinished: EU and the W/Restern Balkans in a Time of Crisis
Editors: Nebojša Blanuša and Zlatan Krajina (Faculty of Political
Science, University of Zagreb).
The book explores the political, cultural and communicational aspects of
EU’s enlargement towards the East, in the context of the recent entry of
its new member state Croatia, and many others in the Balkans, waiting in
the wings.
At a time when crisis, in various forms, has taken the status of
permanence, and when trans- and intra-European migration has come to
serve the elites as an occasion to question the future of
multiculturalism, new candidates, mainly in the Balkans, offer a rather
different vision of the unified Europe. For the ex-Yugoslav countries in
particular (Europe’s old ‘inner others’ in the Balkans), the EU serves
as a desired escape from the burdens of the peninsula traditionally
connoted as ‘troubled’ (lawless and undemocratic) into what is perceived
as an ordered and prosperous Central and Western Europe. ‘European-ness’
has become a token of exchange in a symbolic economy of accession as
much as a flexible geographical appellation. Following the bloody
dissolution of Yugoslavia, and a rocky transitional justice and
democratisation, Croatia’s effort (2003-2013) to ‘exit’ the Balkans’ and
‘enter’ ‘Europe’ has been marked by the EU’s endeavour to ‘train’ the
Balkan newcomer, and attain, in return, a rare but much needed
expression of optimism about the prospects of the EU project itself.
In 2013, Croatia was the first Western Balkan country to enter after
Slovenia in 2004, and Serbia has recently started the accession
negotiations. We ask whether these developments constitute a
transformation of the Balkans as they have been known (into Southeastern
Europe? Western and Eastern ‘balkanised’ Balkans?), what does the entry
of one country from the region into the EU means for others (tougher
criteria?, optimism?), and what has made the EU Croatians’, Serbians’,
Bosnians’, Montenegrins’, Kosovar’s, Macedonians’, and Turks’ preferred
home for the future? By extension, how has Euro-optimism taken shape in
Ukraine? Furthermore, if the EU (a political union) is routinely equated
with Europe (the continent), and European-ness is given powerful, if
changing, semantic charge (a trope of modernity, progress, and boundary
maintenance), what is the role of media in the constitution of the EU as
a ‘space of identity’ (as coined by David Morley and Kevin Robins)? In
the context of the latest, Croatian accession, and the recent start of
negotiations with Serbia, does the recursive stretching of the EU’s
borders change or reproduce the traditional West/East divide and its
politics of borders?
Authors are invited to submit papers dealing with but not restricted to
the following key issues:
• The complex relationship between Europe, the EU and its various inner
and outer Others, as political entities, historical trajectories,
geographical locations, social and cultural phenomena and practices, in
the context of the accession processes in the Western and ‘Restern’ Balkans
• The interplay of media representations of Europe and its various
(Oriental or Balkan) Others; policies and institutional incentives for
the creation of inter-European ‘mediaspheres’; and the everyday
practices of European citizens and migrants concerning their belonging
within, across and beside the EU
• The institutional and cultural transformations involved in any of the
EU’s waves of enlargements – in relation to the gradual inclusion of the
Balkans into the EU
Successful proposals are expected to adopt:
• A critical perspective, assuming that what is analysed articulates
certain power relations between the EU’s institutions, states, regions,
political elites, media and ordinary people
• A multidimensional perspective, whereby Europe exists at once as an
idea, a continent, a system of representation, a system of legislation
and economy, and a lived reality
• A methodological and intellectual flexibility, in transgressing
disciplinary boundaries, and innovative (unconventional) approaches to
research and presentation of argument
Papers can be based on empirical research or on a theoretical discussion
addressing any of the above issues. We welcome both conventional
scholarly papers and creative presentations involving visual methods;
unusual approaches and interdisciplinary ventures (politics, political
economy, media and cultural studies, human geography, history); and
contributions from authors not necessarily affiliated with academic
institutions.
Deadline for abstracts (400-500 words) is 1 May 2014. Abstracts and
short author bios
should be sent to (nblanusa /at/ fpzg.hr) <mailto:(nblanusa /at/ fpzg.hr)> and
(zkrajina /at/ fpzg.hr) <mailto:(zkrajina /at/ fpzg.hr)> . Successful submissions will
be notified by 1 June 2014. Deadline for full paper (up to 6000 words,
including references) submission will be 1 December 2014.
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