Colonization or Partnership? 
Eastern Europe and Western Social Sciences

issue 1., 1996

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 ÖRKÉNY, 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

back