replika

1. issue

1996


Colonization or Partnership?
Eastern Europe and Western Social Sciences


Introduction < >


CATEGORIES

ANNA WESSELY
The Cognitive Chance of Central European Sociology < >

DEBORAH J. CAHALEN
What Stalin and Reagan Told Us to Think < >
The Reproduction of the Cold War Paradigm in American Academia

DAVID A. KIDECKEL
What's In A Name? < >
The Persistence of Eastern Europe as Conceptual Category


PARADIGMS

GYÖRGY LENGYEL
Economic Sociology in East-Central Europe: Trends and Challenges < >

TIBOR KUCZI
The Split Sociological Mind in East-European Societies Comments on György Lengyel's article < >

MIKLÓS HADAS
Bartók, the Scientist < >


FEMINISMS

SUSAN GAL
Feminism and Civil Society < >

MÁRIA NEMÉNYI
The Social Construction of Women's Roles in Hungary < >

JIRINA SIKLOVÁ
Different Region, Different Women: Why Feminism Isn't Successful in the Czech Republic < >

JIRINA SMEJKALOVÁ
On the Road: Smuggling Feminism Across the Post-Iron Curtain < >

MÁDÁLINA NICOLAESCU
Utopian Desires and Western Representations of Femininity < >


EXCHANGES

GYÖRGY CSEPELI AND ANTAL ORKÉNY, WITH KIM LANE SCHEPPELE
Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome in Social Science in
Eastern Europe < >

RUDOLF ANDORKA
The Uses of International Cooperation in the
Social Sciences < >

ZUZANA KUSÁ
The Immune Deficiency - Acquired or Inherited? < >

ALAINA LEMON AND DAVID ALTSHULER
Whose Social Science Is
Colonized? < >

GYÖRGY CSEPELI, ANTAL ÖRKÉNY, KIM LANE SCHEPPELE
Response to Our Critics (and to Our Supporters) < >


Please send your comments to: replika@c3.hu