"In this feisty and original book, Matt Killingsworth argues strongly against the conventional view of civil society's role in bringing down Communism in Europe, arguing that the concept of a 'totalitarian public sphere' better describes developments in the late-Communist era. This book will lead to renewed controversy on what civil society is and what its role - if any - was in late-Communist societies." - Professor Leslie Holmes, School of Social and Political Sciences, University of Melbourne "Matt Killingsworth's exploration of dissent in communist Czechoslovakia, the GDR and Poland offers a fundamental reconceptualisation of the nature of these regimes. His concept of the 'totalitarian public sphere', as a reworking of Habermas' 'bourgeois public sphere', opens up the debate, by offering a more flexible, dynamic image of what totalitarian rule was.Grounded in a detailed study of how dissident groups functioned in this environment, it raises important questions about the public/private sphere, public/popular opinion, notions of individual and group identity, and strategies of regime legitimation.
This is a major theoretical contribution to the study of communist regimes which highlights inherent limits to state power and the way in which issues of power were contested." MATT KILLINGSWORTH is a lecturer in International Relations at the School of Government at the University of Tasmania. He has previously held teaching positions at Latrobe University and the University of Melbourne. He has published widely on dissent and opposition in Communist Eastern Europe, transitional justice (lustration) in Czechoslovakia and Poland and political legitimacy in the Soviet Union and Communist Czechoslovakia and Poland.
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