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Book Details
Abstract
Overthrowing communism in 1989 and joining the European Union in 2004, the Polish people hold loyalties to region, country and now continent – even as the definition of what it means to be ‘European’ remains unclear. Paying particular attention to those who came of age in the earliest years of the neoliberal and democratic transformations, this book uses the life-story narratives of rural and urban southern Poles to reveal how ‘being European’ is considered a fundamental component of ‘being Polish’ while participants are simultaneously ‘becoming European’. Ultimately, this study demonstrates how the EU is regarded as both an idea and an instrument, and how ordinary citizens make choices that influence the shape of European identity and the legitimacy of its institutions.
Marysia H. Galbraith is an associate professor at the University of Alabama’s New College and Department of Anthropology.
Overthrowing communism in 1989 and joining the European Union in 2004, the Polish people hold loyalties to region, country and now continent – even as the definition of what it means to be ‘European’ remains unclear. This book uses the life-story narratives of rural and urban southern Poles to reveal how ‘being European’ is considered a fundamental component of ‘being Polish’ while participants are simultaneously ‘becoming European’.
Close attention to the individual lives of Poles allows the author to identify cultural patterns and grasp the impact of the EU on its member states, paying particular attention to how the EU has affected the life experiences of Poles who came of age in the earliest years of the neoliberal and democratic transformations. In exploring what it means to be Polish by tracking these parallel processes of change, the author traces Poland’s path from state socialism to European integration and Polish identities as they are reinscribed, revised and reinvented in the face of historic, political and economic processes.
Ultimately, this study demonstrates how the EU is regarded as both an idea and an instrument, and how ordinary citizens make choices that influence the shape of European identity and the legitimacy of its institutions.
Bronislaw Malinowski Social Science Award
“Galbraith’s innovative book is a must for anyone interested in postsocialist transformations. Through the author’s deep understanding of Poles’ cognitive categories, we see the EU as it is experienced in everyday life. Her insights will spark new debates in European studies.” —Jaro Stacul, University of Alberta
“A wise and interesting book based on a fresh field of evidence which highlights issues important to individuals as well as societies.” —Zofia Sokolewicz, Professor Emerita, Institute of Ethnology and Cultural Anthropology, University of Warsaw
Table of Contents
Section Title | Page | Action | Price |
---|---|---|---|
Being and Becoming European in Poland | i | ||
Title | iii | ||
Copyright | iv | ||
CONTENTS | v | ||
LIST OF FIGURES AND TABLES | ix | ||
Figures | ix | ||
Tables | x | ||
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS | xi | ||
Chapter 1 INTRODUCTION: BEING AND BECOMING EUROPEAN IN POSTCOMMUNIST POLAND | 1 | ||
Long-Term Fieldwork | 4 | ||
Anthropological Studies of the European Union | 10 | ||
Anthropological Studies of Nation and Ethnicity | 16 | ||
Anthropological Studies of Self | 20 | ||
A Person-Centered Approach to European Integration and Collective Identities | 24 | ||
Chapter 2 “WE HAVE ALWAYS BEEN IN EUROPE”: DEPLOYING THE PAST TO SHAPE THE PRESENT | 27 | ||
Bartek: Historical Consciousness in the Twenty-First Century | 27 | ||
Deploying the Past to Shape the Present | 29 | ||
National Mythology: Polish Messianism and the Heroic Ideal | 30 | ||
National Mythologies in Everyday Life | 36 | ||
Corruption of a glorious past | 38 | ||
The history that matters is personal | 39 | ||
Past and future in Europe | 41 | ||
The Smolensk Disaster | 44 | ||
History of Katyn | 45 | ||
Commemoration and controversy | 46 | ||
A country divided? Competing explanations of the tragedy | 50 | ||
Moving Forward | 52 | ||
Aneta: Not the Christ of Nations Anymore | 53 | ||
Chapter 3 “UNBELIEVABLE! POLES ARE HAPPY”:\rLOOKING TOWARD THE FUTURE | 57 | ||
Józef: Building a Future | 57 | ||
Unbelievable! Poles Are Happy! | 59 | ||
The 1990s: Living in the Present | 61 | ||
The Twenty-First Century: Looking toward the Future | 68 | ||
Education | 69 | ||
Mortgages | 72 | ||
Children | 74 | ||
Retirement | 75 | ||
“Even the Crisis Didn’t Work Out” | 77 | ||
Wiola: Everything on Schedule | 80 | ||
Chapter 4 “WE’RE EUROPEAN BECAUSE WE’RE POLISH”: LOCAL, NATIONAL AND EUROPEAN IDENTITIES | 83 | ||
Wojtek: Pole, European and Euroskeptic | 83 | ||
Imagining Territorial Scales of Social Organization | 85 | ||
Attachment to Place: Quality and Intensity at Different Scales | 88 | ||
Talking about region | 89 | ||
Talking about nation | 93 | ||
Talking about Europe | 96 | ||
European Integration and Territorial Scales of Belonging | 98 | ||
Do scales of belonging preclude each other? | 98 | ||
Which do you consider your priority? | 101 | ||
Which describes you best? | 103 | ||
Being and Becoming European | 107 | ||
Marek: I Can Live Anywhere | 108 | ||
Chapter 5 “EU MEMBERSHIP GIVES POLAND A BETTER CHANCE”: PERSPECTIVES ON EUROPEAN INTEGRATION | 113 | ||
Ewelina: Prospects for a Better Life in the European Union | 113 | ||
Becoming European: Overview of the Integration Process | 116 | ||
Association | 118 | ||
Candidacy | 119 | ||
Accession | 121 | ||
Perspectives on the European Union | 123 | ||
Economic opportunity vs. consumer market | 125 | ||
Governance: Transnational order vs. external control | 126 | ||
Implications for the European Union | 131 | ||
Krzysiek: Let Someone Else Govern Us | 133 | ||
Chapter 6 “NOW WE CAN TRAVEL WITHOUT A PASSPORT”: MOBILITY IN THE EUROPEAN UNION | 137 | ||
Dorota: Opportunity and Loss in England | 137 | ||
Mobility in the European Union | 140 | ||
History of Polish Migration | 143 | ||
“I Can Go Abroad with just My ID Card, and I Can Work Legally” | 149 | ||
Eased restrictions on mobility | 149 | ||
Social advancement and social demotion in an imagined world hierarchy | 151 | ||
Global mobility and the choice to stay home | 155 | ||
Traveling without a Passport | 157 | ||
Stasiek: Transnational Entrepreneur | 158 | ||
Chapter 7 “THIS REGION IS OUR \rPRIORITY”: EU SUBSIDIES AND THE DEVELOPMENT OF A TRANSNATIONAL REGIONAL COMMUNITY | 163 | ||
Joasia: Social Entrepreneur | 163 | ||
Using EU Subsidies: Social Entrepreneurs, Public Servants and Flexible Farmers | 166 | ||
EU Programs and Local Projects | 168 | ||
Agriculture | 169 | ||
Infrastructure | 173 | ||
Regional culture | 175 | ||
EU Standards and New Ways of Being | 181 | ||
Transnational Regional Community | 187 | ||
Halina: Organic Farmer | 189 | ||
Chapter 8 CONCLUSION:\rCOMING OF AGE IN EUROPE | 193 | ||
Appendix LIST OF PARTICIPANTS | 203 | ||
Notes | 207 | ||
Chapter 1 Introduction: Being and Becoming \rEuropean in Postcommunist Poland | 207 | ||
Chapter 2 “We Have Always Been in Europe”: Deploying the Past to Shape the Present | 208 | ||
Chapter 3 “Unbelievable! Poles Are Happy”: Looking toward the Future | 210 | ||
Chapter 4 “We’re European because We’re Polish”: \rLocal, National and European Identities | 210 | ||
Chapter 5 “EU Membership Gives Poland a Better Chance”: Perspectives on European Integration | 211 | ||
Chapter 6 “Now We Can Travel without a Passport”: Mobility in the European Union | 211 | ||
Chapter 7 “This Region Is Our Priority”: EU Subsidies and the Development of a Transnational Regional Community | 211 | ||
Chapter 8 Conclusion: Coming of Age in Europe | 213 | ||
REFERENCES | 215 | ||
INDEX | 229 |