The current transformation of many Eastern European societies is impossible to understand without comprehending the intellectual struggles surrounding nationalism in the region. Anthropologist Katherine Verdery shows how the example of Romania suggests that current ethnic tensions come not from a resurrection of pre-Communist Nationalism but from the strengthening of national ideologies under Communist Party rule.
Katherine Verdery is Julien J. Studley Faculty Scholar and Distinguished Professor of Anthropology at the Graduate Center of the City University of New York. Since 1973 she has conducted field research in Romania, initially emphasizing the political economy of social inequality, ethnic relations, and nationalism. With the changes of 1989, her work shifted to problems of the transformation of socialist systems, specifically changing property relations in agriculture. From 1993 to 2000 she did fieldwork on this theme in a Transylvanian community; the resulting book, The Vanishing Hectare: Property and Value in Postsocialist Transylvania, was published by Cornell University Press (2003). She then completed a large collaborative project with Gail Kligman (UCLA) and a number of Romanian scholars on the opposite process, the formation of collective and state farms in Romania during the 1950s. The resulting book, Peasants under Siege: The Collectivization of Romanian Agriculture, 1949-1962, was published by Princeton University Press (2011).
National Marxism? Possible only in Communist Romania
The cultural life in socialist Romania is full of nuances and deserves analysis from different perspectives.
The author of this book focusses, in particular, on the idea of nationalism, the national idea/essence and its development in cultural and political discourses throughout Romanian history, and especially under Ceaușescu's rule.
Why did a Party such as the Communist one in Romania need to rely on national ideology if Marxism-Leninism (already legitimating its power) was everything but national? How is this paradox to be explained among some others originated from it?
Verdery is the first scholar to study these dynamics in the West immediatly after the 1989 revolution(s) and the fall of Ceaușescu. Even if this monograph was published in 1990, I think it can still be considered one of the finest and detailed accademic essays on this topic.
The current transformation of many Eastern European societies is impossible to understand without comprehending the intellectual struggles surrounding nationalism in the region. This book shows how the example of Romania suggests that current ethnic tensions come not from a resurrection of pre-Communist Nationalism but from the strengthening of national ideologies under Communist Party rule. I found particularly enlightening Verdery's discussion of Romanian protochronism, or the tendency to define virtually everything as a 'Romanian first.' Having traveled extensively throughout the new Eastern Europe and having conversed with many academics, students, and laymen from these countries, I always found it fascinating how obsessed these people are with claiming primacy for their intellectuals, their artists, their history (especially their origins, often fabricated at worse and exaggerated at best0, indeed, all of their 'accomplishments. Verdery asserts, at least in Romania, this tendency flows not only from a historically and geographically frail position between competing imperialist empires (Austrian, Russian, Ottoman, mostly), but also from the tendency of cultural elites to use national pride and national 'essence' as nation-state unifiers. Even though the collapse of communism, or in Romania's case, sociology, occurred more than twenty years ago, it seems to me that the protochronist tendencies still abound in states such as Romania.
This is an interesting look at how political and intellectual activity in Romania under Ceausescu came to revolve around the nation, overshadowing and eventually displacing Marxism. The book explores how this nationalism was reinforced by both the Party leadership and by conflicts among intellectuals, and the ways in which Romania’s highly centralized state socialist system shaped the strengthening of national ideology, which continued to have an impact after 1989. I’d recommend this book to anyone interested in nationalism and socialism in Eastern Europe.