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Title: Self-Colonization of Central and Eastern Europe


1
Self-Colonization of Central and Eastern Europe
  • Alexander Kiossev,
  • University of Sofia

2
  • Part 1 The Post-Colonial Turn
  • Introduction into the mess of concepts

3
Colonization
  • Colonialism is the establishment and
    maintenance, for an extended time, of rule over
    an alien people that is separate from and
    subordinate to the ruling power. It is no longer
    closely associated with the term colonization,
    which involves the settlement abroad of people
    from a mother country as in the case of the
    ancient Greek colonies or the Americas.
    Colonialism has now come to be identified with
    rule over peoples of different race inhabiting
    lands separated by salt water from the imperial
    center ... Some further features of the
    colonial situation are domination of an alien
    minority, asserting racial and cultural
    superiority over a materially inferior native
    majority contact between a machine-oriented
    civilization with Christian origins, a powerful
    economy, and a rapid rhythm of life and a
    non-Christian civilization that lacks machines
    and is marked by a backward economy and a slow
    rhythm of life and the imposition of the first
    civilization upon the second
  • Emerson, Rupert Colonialism. In Sills, David L.
    (Hg.) International Encyclopedia of the Social
    Sciences. Bd. 3. New York, London Macmillan
    1968, pp. 1-5

4
Analysis of the definition
  • Rule/domination over alien people
  • Settlers (not necessarily)
  • Distance (salt water)
  • Alien-ness as different race (race distance)
  • Alien-ness as cultural difference (cultural
    distance)
  • Alien-ness as religious difference (religious
    distance)
  • Technological difference (technological distance)
  • Economic differences (economic distance)
  • Different rhythms of life (anthropological
    distance)
  • Imperial centre

5
Questions
  • What is the reason for connecting the rule with
    the imposition of the first civilization upon
    the second? Colonization is more than rule it
    requires imposition of superior civilization by a
    distant Empire.
  • Why are differences presented as distance and
    distance as superiority legitimizing the
    rule/imposition?
  • The concept of superiority is split religious
    (Christian) superiority vs. ethnic/racial
    superiority reducible vs. irreducible
    (natural) superiority.
  • What is the role of the salt water? It implies
    new type of sea transportation, a whole new manly
    world of sailors after 1492, risky voyages into
    the dangerous open sea, sea monsters, pirates,
    savages, adventures, exotic islands, earthly
    paradises It implies imagination.

6
What does imposition of civilization mean?
  • Import of institutions
  • Power/knowledge import of cognitive categories
    supporting the rule
  • Import of practical know how
  • Standardization/Normalization
  • Import of legal frame
  • Control and sanctions, menagerial skills
    GOVERNMENTALITY
  • I
  • import of religion and ideology the Grand
    Narrative of progress, modernization and the
    burden of the white man
  • Import of educational models
  • Giving birth to new goals, dreams and longings
    import of IMAGINATION

7
What is social imagination?
  • Social imagination usually implies a background
    intuitive knowledge, a body of stereotypes shared
    by a community for Charles Taylor it is a widely
    shared pre-theoretical reservoir of shared
    perceptions, both descriptive and prescriptive.
  • Here we assume that usually this reservoir is
    structured as a historical narrative, which rules
    the dreams, longings and phantasma shared by the
    members of certain social group.
  • Next assumption Colonialism is not only rule
    over distant territories and alien populations
    it is rule over the collective imaginations, over
    the reservoir of dreams, longings and phantasma
    both of the imperial and the colonized
    populations. It is imposition of a Grand
    Eurocentric Narrative.
  • I.e. colonization is not only domination, it is
    hegemony internalization of the hegemonic
    cultural values, narratives, images - self-
    stigmatizion and traumatic subjectivization. It
    is a longing for Ëurope, The West, the
    civilized World.
  • Modern colonization is marked by two dominant
    mirror longings the innocent Earthly Paradise
    vs, The Civilized World of Christianity,
    Progress, Enlightenment and Civilization Between
    them are distance and the salt water.

8
The postcolonial condition
  • The process of decolonization after the WW II in
    Asia, (the Arab world, Indo-China, Indonesia)
    and Africa 1949 1965. The model cases Indian
    independence 1947 the Suez Crisis 1956. The
    spread of the decolonization process all around
    the world, disintegration of all colonial
    Empires.
  • Local Asian and African nationalisms, democracies
    and authoritarian regimes, political chaos,
    ethnic cleansing success stories and
    unsuccessful states.
  • The problem of the colonial legacy and the
    Empire writes back. The europeanizined local
    elites and their values.
  • The anti-colonial intellectual resistance Frantz
    Fanon and the program for vomiting of the
    European cultural values. Are alternative
    culture, alternative language (cultural codes)
    and alternative, non-European imagination
    possible? New national and pan-African
    literatures
  • Cultural wars and the revision of the Eurocentric
    cultural canons 1982 Stanford

9
Postcolonial studies
  • Inside the American and west-European university
    academic critique and deconstruction of
    Eurocentrism
  • Edward Said and Orientalism as critique of the
    Eurocentric power/knowledge about the East
  • Homi Bhabha and the critique of hegemonic
    narratives. The split, hybrid and fragmented,
    impossible narratives of the colonized
  • Gayatry Spivak and The Subaltern cannot speak
  • The general problem lack of authentic symbolic
    resource of the colonized knowledge, narratives,
    language imagination. Symbolic colonization.

10
The Metaphor Self-Colonization
  • This metaphor can be used for cultures having
    succumbed to the cultural power of Europe and the
    West without having practically been invaded and
    turned into colonies. Historical circumstances
    transformed them into an extra-colonial
    periphery, lateral viewers who have not been
    directly affected either by important colonial
    conflicts or by the techniques of colonial rule.
  • Yet, they are in a situation where they had to
    recognize self-evidently the foreign cultural
    dominance and voluntarily absorb the basic values
    and categories of colonial Europe. The result
    might be named hegemony without domination.
  • The reason the rule over imaginations
    trespasses the borders of the actual territorial
    colonial rule In the world of late XIX centuries
    the colonial imagination started functioning as
    Universal (in fact, Eurocentric) Symbolic
    Order, valid everywhere - even in the few
    non-colonized corners of the.
  • Short labels for this process of global
    conquering the various local imaginations
    civilization process, progress, Modernity,
    westernization, Europeanization.

11
Self-colonization, imagination and public
discourse
  • Important difference between factual colonial
    conquer and the conquer of desires, longings and
    hopes. The conquer of the imagination of the
    repressed (the dream about the West,
    Europeanization) the ultimate form of Power.
  • The maps of the real Empires and the Empires of
    the imaginations do not coincide the ideal West
    is bigger than the real West.
  • This form of Power the conquer of imagination
    could be called self-colonization. The joke and
    the Californication.
  • Self-colonizing imagination is not a
    psychological phenomenon it is the inner
    structure of cultural production and the paradigm
    of the public discourse of the peripheral
    countries it has public validity.

12
Example 1 the first Bulgarian journal the
obsessive imagining of absence
  • In 1842 Konstantin Fotinov (1790 - 1858), the
    creator of the first Bulgarian magazine
    Lyuboslovie (Philology), published a remarkable
    appeal which treats ardently and with pain all
    that lack of civilisation in the Bulgarians
  • "Where are their daily newspapers and magazines,
    or the weekly and monthly ones? Where are their
    artistic magazines, their rhetoric, mathematics,
    logic, physics, philosophy, etc., etc., which man
    needs more than bread? Where is their history,
    written in detail and widely spread among people,
    such as the other nations have and which would
    help us to stand side by side with the others and
    make the others aware of the fact that we are as
    verbal as the rest of God's creatures?"
  • The Bulgarian press during the National Revival
    abounded in similar appeals dealing with the lack
    of civilisation. They all represent patriotic
    complaints about various shortages about the
    lack of cultural institutions, literary or
    scientific achievements, good manners or great
    Bulgarian poets. Yet, in spite of their variety
    and heterogeneity one can see that all these
    complaints expressed much more a morbid awareness
    of the absence of a whole civilisational model
    rather than of some concrete civilisational
    achievement.

13
  • Part II
  • Modernization, Civilization, Europeanization or
    Self-Colonization?

14
Imagination and practice
  • During the XIXth century this imagination of
    absence (variants of barbarity, orientalism,
    backwardness etc.) has been transformed into
    practical modernization programs. Important!
    social imagination is not only imagination, it
    has real practical consequences.
  • The sociological mechanism of this process the
    local elites were educated in cross-border
    universities back home, they took up roles as
    educators, revolutionaries, writers, journalists,
    tutors and started disseminating the
    Europe-centered colonial conceptual repertoire.
  • They did it without violence or colonial
    governmentality but through the softer channels
    that had the leverage for captivating the
    imagination stories, books, school classes and
    textbooks, popular literature, political
    propaganda and journalism.
  • These early patriots without nations, self-styled
    national utopians and visionaries, introduced the
    notion of the sovereign nation and invented, by
    dint of studied models, local historical
    traditions.

15
The dark side of the universal Eurocentric
imaginary the internalization of asymmetries
and hierarchies
  • Traditionally named Europeanization and
    Modernization, this process had along with
    its indisputably positive effects its dark side
    as well.
  • Along with the values of Christianity,
    civilization, the Enlightenment, along with the
    placards of progress, liberty and revolution, the
    Europe-centered colonial were irreversibly
    cemented into the collective imagination of such
    groups. The trauma of being peripheral is
    internalized and transformed into a key element
    of the national identity building process.
  • The notions of a European center and peripheries,
    of masters and natural subjects,
    enlightened and non-enlightened of a
    civilization source and its passive recipients,
    are taken to be natural, eternal and
    self-apparent they became part of the common
    cultural currency and the public discourse of
    the new nations.

16
Consequences the traumatic identity building
  • The new imagined communities (i.e. the modern
    nations) emerge in a power field in an
    asymmetrical global imagined geography, which is
    strongly hierarchical and hegemonic - they
    immerge in an Eurocentric World.
  • Their collective identities are from the very
    beginning fatefully marked by their specific
    imaginary l?cation in this asymmetrical colonial
    Eurocentric world they are either in the Centre
    (the focus of Civilization, Modernity and
    Progress) or in one or another of the variously
    stigmatized peripheries (backward, barbaric,
    exotic or shameful).
  • Accordingly, the peripheral nations internalize
    their birth-stigma and perceive themselves trough
    it a process of traumatic collective
    identity-building, painful and sometimes shameful
    collective subjectivation and sense of belonging.
    They perceive themselves as cultures of absences
    and backwardness.
  • There is dialectical duality of shame and pride
    in the self-perception of such peripheral
    nations, in their public sphere emerge two group
    of ideologists apologists of better
    westernizations and catching up with West
    and the opposite trend, pride nationalists,
    nativists (zapadniki I povhveniki)

17
Consequences the imported, imitative and hybrid
high cultures
  • The artists and thinkers in such cultures are
    living with the sense of periphery and
    provincialism, they follow fashions, rarely
    create fashions, ideas, paradigms.
  • They struggle for recognition by foreign
    audiences and experts the local (peripheral)
    recognition is not enough.
  • Translation and translatability are crucial
    issue.
  • Any attempt of self-centering in such cultures
    looks suspicious it borders with nationalism,
    autochthonic ideologies, archaic nativism and
    xenophobia.

18
Example 2 the longing for Bulgarian novel
  • 1870 1890 The Sense of Absence of the Novel.
    Translation, Bulgarizations. genre Imitations
    import of models.
  • The First Bulgarian Novel (1989 Ivan Vazov) and
    the negative reaction of the newly born Bulgarian
    literary criticism two accusations 1. it is
    imitation 2. it is not a real novel.
  • 1890ies. The rival literary context the
    competing non-Novels memoirs,
    autobiographies, short stories, journalistic
    documentary, vs. epic poems, lyric prose, lyrics.
  • 1890 1914 Generational Quarrels,
    Non-recognition of previous novels, contested
    tradition, difficult canon building
  • The need for recognition by foreign authorities
  • Problems of translatability/non-translatability.
    2012-2013 The case Gospodinov Ruskov.

19
The imported modern public institutions and their
social status
  • Similar to the situation in the real colonies,
    the institutions in the self-colonizing cultures
    were not created in a process of incremental
    maturing and adaptation turning them into
    unquestionable and long-lasting, habitual
    practices.
  • They were imported as prestigious European models
    and imposed by sweeping modernizing gestures of
    the elites who scraped them together and
    legitimized them in a broadly westernizing and
    very often eclectic and inherently controversial
    manner.
  • In this process there always remained a whole lot
    of things impossible to import the practical
    know how, the habits and routines, the well
    established ethos, the roles and rules in an
    everyday performance of an institution.
  • As a result, the institutions were too often
    accommodated, used in unexpected ways to
    unforeseen ends, in line with bricolage patterns,
    i.e. they are hybridized.
  • This in turn provided a special role to the
    public sphere it had to live up to certain
    standards amidst public outcry, vitriolic
    criticisms and blazing philippics. Public
    institutions often found themselves under so much
    and so blatant pressure as to push them to the
    brink of loosing their credibility altogether.

20
Example 3 modernization and de-Orientalization
of Sofia the longing for European capital.
  • 1880 1930 The modernizing struggle of the
    municipality. De-Orientalization of Sofia on
    symbolic and infrastructural level. Streets,
    public parks, pavement, street lamps,
    electricity, trams.
  • Destruction or self-destruction of the old
    turkishmarketplace, of the numerous mosques.
  • Building of prestigious public buildings in
    European style national parliament, national
    theatre, university, banks, galeries, schools
    etc.

21
Sofia 1879
22
The De-Orientalization process
23
The De-Orientalization process 2
24
Sofia-Centre 1900
25
Sofia-Centre The National Theatre 1907
26
Sofia-Centre the University 1930
27
Example 4 building and usages of Sofias first
modern waterworks network
  • By the time of the National Liberation (1878)
    Sofia populations (11 000) uses water from only
    54 public fountains there are just 3 Ottoman
    "experts to take care for them.
  • The first waterworks project was designed by the
    engineers Belov and Kubassov. 1884 - difficult
    financing, yet the municipality demonstrates
    will for modernization combined with a chaotic
    tactics of economizing and improvised
    adjusting off the technical realization of the
    project. The hybrid nature of the technological
    result.
  • Tensions between political authorities and
    technical experts, corrupted governmentality,
    private interests shadowing the public interest
    and the technological standards.

28
The real waterworks cultural practices and
usages
  • Resistance by the peasant population surrounding
    Sofia sabotages.
  • The unexpected difficulties in maintenance of the
    waterworks network. Lack of educated technical
    personnel.
  • The strange water habits of the Sofioters (
    1900 population of 70 000) and the economic
    collapse of the modernizing project - the
    population, used to pre-modern attitude to water,
    doesnt regard water as commodity, refuses to
    pay for it, it steals water with illegal pipes
    etc.

29
The imagined ideological waterworks
  • Municipality pride of the technical miracle
  • Journalistic enthusiasm about the symbol of
    progress
  • General approval and pride of the public

30
The first phase 1884 -1900
31
The first phase 1884 -1900 the Apostles of
Progress
32
The Consumers of Progress
33
Consequences on the anthropological level the
status of norms and practices in everyday life
  • Lack of factual colonial governmentality bad
    management, imperfect rules of the game, local
    interests, weak control of results and misusages
  • The imported norms (ideals, models, rules) remain
    non-imbedded in the everyday practices they are
    too distant, too alien, too non-habitual.
  • The habitual everyday practices are wild,
    resistant, non-obedient they tactically use
    the norms for their own purposes

34
Example the German Menscheschlange and English
queue vs. the Bulgarian ??????
  • The Queue simple model of social institution
    habitual formal rules, ruling roles, behaviors
    and mutual expectations
  • Visibility of norms, usages and mis-usages
  • Visualisation of order, disorder (chaos or
    transgression?) and sanctions

35
Menschenschlange
36
Menschenschlange (arbeitslose Informatiker in
Zürich)
37
English queue
38
English queue
39
Bulgarian ?????? (literal meaning tail)
40
Queue in front of Sofias bank
41
Ukrainian case
42
The western message of the queue image - the
reproduced social order
43
?????? as the eastern image of poaching tactics
44
Poaching tactics is conscious about the norm
45
Interactions and tensions between high and
popular culture
  • It could be summarized as a stream of indignant
    criticisms alleging shortage of civilization from
    the top and torrent of irony, adaptations,
    adjustments, travesties, special uses,
    substitutions and hybrids from the bottom
    designed to evade or undermine the top.
  • The masses, engrossed in their traditional way of
    living (with its own channels, agents and pace of
    modernizing and Europeanizing), never went the
    whole way in recognizing their Europeid elites
    with their modernizing projects and civilizing
    claims.
  • The elites suffered the paradox of an inherent
    illegitimacy as being locally born, not truly
    European on their part, they decried the
    inferior human material of the masses

46
Discussion about the situation in Eastern Europe
before 1989
  • Was the membership in the Eastern bloc under the
    leadership of the Soviet Union and during the
    Cold War a colonial rule? Or maybe not?

47
Discussion about the recent situation in Eastern
Europe
  • How should we interpret the enlargement of EU
  • Accession?
  • Colonization?
  • Self-Colonization?
  • None of this terms is adequate, we have to look
    for a different label
  • What are the reactions of the different
    sociological strata of the population in your
    country toward the accession, what are the
    tactical East European uses and misuses of EU And
    Europe?
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