Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Tables, Figures and Maps
- Acknowledgements
- List of Abbreciations
- INTRODUCTION: The Europeanization of Bulgarian Society: A Long-Lasting Political Project
- CHAPTER ONE Institution-Building, Political Culture and Identity in Bulgaria: The Challenge of ‘Europeanization’
- CHAPTER TWO Appropriations of Bulgarian Literature in the West: From Pencho Slaveikov to Iordan Iovkov
- CHAPTER THREE Communism and Cold War in Bulgaria: The Absence of Europe?
- CHAPTER FOUR Bulgarian Turks During the Transition Period
- CHAPTER FIVE Women's Identity and Social Policy in Bulgaria Before and After 1989
- CHAPTER SIX Legal Status and Migrant Economic Performance: The Case of Bulgarians in Spain and Greece
- CHAPTER SEVEN Bulgaria's Path to EU Membership – and Beyond
- CHAPTER EIGHT Accession into the Euro-Atlantic Institutions: Effects on Bulgaria's Balkan Policy(-ies)
- CHAPTER NINE Mirroring Gazes: Europe, Nationalism and Change in the Field of Bulgarian Art and Culture
- CHAPTER TEN The Emergence of Regional Policy in Bulgaria and the Role of the EU
- EPILOGUE
- Appendix I Tables, Figures and Maps
- Notes
- List of Contributors
CHAPTER EIGHT - Accession into the Euro-Atlantic Institutions: Effects on Bulgaria's Balkan Policy(-ies)
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 March 2012
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Tables, Figures and Maps
- Acknowledgements
- List of Abbreciations
- INTRODUCTION: The Europeanization of Bulgarian Society: A Long-Lasting Political Project
- CHAPTER ONE Institution-Building, Political Culture and Identity in Bulgaria: The Challenge of ‘Europeanization’
- CHAPTER TWO Appropriations of Bulgarian Literature in the West: From Pencho Slaveikov to Iordan Iovkov
- CHAPTER THREE Communism and Cold War in Bulgaria: The Absence of Europe?
- CHAPTER FOUR Bulgarian Turks During the Transition Period
- CHAPTER FIVE Women's Identity and Social Policy in Bulgaria Before and After 1989
- CHAPTER SIX Legal Status and Migrant Economic Performance: The Case of Bulgarians in Spain and Greece
- CHAPTER SEVEN Bulgaria's Path to EU Membership – and Beyond
- CHAPTER EIGHT Accession into the Euro-Atlantic Institutions: Effects on Bulgaria's Balkan Policy(-ies)
- CHAPTER NINE Mirroring Gazes: Europe, Nationalism and Change in the Field of Bulgarian Art and Culture
- CHAPTER TEN The Emergence of Regional Policy in Bulgaria and the Role of the EU
- EPILOGUE
- Appendix I Tables, Figures and Maps
- Notes
- List of Contributors
Summary
Introduction
Although at the centre of the Balkan Peninsula geographically, Bulgaria was politically isolated from the region for most of the twentieth century. Until the end of the Second World War, this isolation was mainly the result of the Bulgarian political elite's irredentism aimed at restoring the state borders outlined in the San Stefano treaty (Map 1). When the communists came to power after the Second World War, they proclaimed a complete break from pre-war irredentism: the work of pre-war writers, historians and other scholars promoting irredentist views was denounced and withdrawn from circulation; military marches and patriotic songs were banned because they included references to territories belonging to neighbouring Balkan states and the communist authorities accepted the territorial status quo of the Balkan region agreed to after the Second World War.3 But, despite these political efforts, Bulgaria continued to remain politically isolated from the Balkans, even in the communist period. The Soviet Union did not support initiatives aimed at promoting multilateral cooperation between the Balkan states because it feared that through such cooperation, Moscow would lose political control over Bulgarian politics.
It is true that there have been some occasions when the Bulgarian communist regime participated in initiatives that promoted multilateral cooperation in the Balkans. Immediately after the Second World War, the BCP was part of an ill-fated attempt to create a Bulgarian–Yugoslav federal state, with a view to its eventually including other Balkan countries.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Bulgaria and EuropeShifting Identities, pp. 129 - 154Publisher: Anthem PressPrint publication year: 2010