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
INTRODUCTION: The Europeanization of Bulgarian Society: A Long-Lasting Political Project
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
Bulgaria joined the European Union (EU) as a full member state on 1 January 2007. This momentous event was the culmination of a long and demanding political project that has often been described as ‘Europeanization’. Although the first foundations of this project were laid fairly soon after the fall of the Bulgarian Communist Party (BCP) regime in 1989, the pace was slow and it was only at the end of the 1990s that it really gained momentum. Over the intervening years the project had ebbed and flowed, but what kept the Bulgarian people committed was their strong belief that joining the EU would fill the wider political, economic and security vacuum which the dissolution of the communist bloc had produced. EU membership was popularly seen as a panacea that would allow Bulgaria to stabilize its newly born democratic system and overcome the economic problems of the post-communist transition. It was also seen as offering confirmation that the Bulgarians were really Europeans and that Bulgaria did belong to Europe.
This identity question partly arose from the very search for EU entry. Rejection would imply that the country lay outside the pale, and this possibility was repeatedly stressed by the political elite as they sought to justify the hardships the country had to bear in order to become part of the European mainstream. However, the question also had deeper historical roots, because being seen as Europeans is a political and cultural challenge that all the modern Balkan states have faced since their independence from the Ottoman Empire.
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- Bulgaria and EuropeShifting Identities, pp. 1 - 22Publisher: Anthem PressPrint publication year: 2010
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