Published online by Cambridge University Press: 14 May 2021
The liberation of Eastern Europe from Soviet control in 1989, followed by the reunification of Germany in 1990 and the establishment of the European Union at the Maastricht Treaty in 1992, seemed to many Europeans to be the realization of the long-held dream of a Europe that was finally at one with itself. In the following decades, EU membership grew from twelve to twenty-eight, embracing many Central and Eastern European countries. In 1993, the European Union member states agreed on the “Copenhagen criteria” to determine the eligibility of nations to join the Union. There were, however, also growing pressures, with a renascent nationalism that culminated in the departure of the UK from the EU in 2020. Chapter 10 focuses on the ways in which the EU came increasingly to be seen as failing to embody the true spirit of Europe, the critique coming both from those who championed national cultures as well as from those who, while feeling that there was a “democratic deficit,” wished to see a reformed EU. The chapter considers a wide range of contemporary views from thinkers and writers across Europe, including Hans Magnus Enzensberger, Umberto Eco, Jürgen Habermas, Régis Debray, and Leili Slimani.
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