Detailed Information on Publication Record
2017
Constructing a Political Enemy: Anti-Communist Framing in the Czech Republic Between 1990 and 2010
HRUBEŠ, Milan and Jiří NAVRÁTILBasic information
Original name
Constructing a Political Enemy: Anti-Communist Framing in the Czech Republic Between 1990 and 2010
Authors
Edition
Intersections. East European Journal of Society and Politics, Budapest, CENTRE SOCIAL SCIENCES, HUNGARIAN ACAD SCIENCES, 2017, 2416-089X
Other information
Language
English
Type of outcome
Článek v odborném periodiku
Field of Study
50601 Political science
Country of publisher
Hungary
Confidentiality degree
není předmětem státního či obchodního tajemství
References:
Organization unit
Faculty of Economics and Administration
UT WoS
000418164000003
Keywords (in Czech)
antikomunismus; postkomunismus; rámování; politický aktivismus; Česká republika
Keywords in English
Anti-communism; Post-communism; Framing; Political Claims; Czech Republic
Tags
International impact, Reviewed
Změněno: 7/3/2023 18:02, Mgr. Pavlína Kurková
Abstract
V originále
The Communist era and its legacy became an important part of Czech (political) culture and identity after 1989. This phenomenon is especially powerful in relation to the meaning making of the communist era after 1989 and the way Czechs are getting over it. Labels such as communist, Bolshevik, normalization, nationalization of property and many others related to the communist era became powerful vehicles for stigmatization and creating a public enemy in almost any sphere, be it political, show business, or public. What makes it especially powerful is that the cultural and historical legacies (understood as deliberately propagated representations of selected fragments of the group’s past), when expressed explicitly, offer models of or for behaviour and thinking. In other words, public memory is often one of the constitutive factors of contentious and politically motivated mobilizations undertaken by different actors like political parties, social movements or individual agents when seeking public support or legitimacy, or just aiming to achieve their goals. In post-communist countries these actors often strive to mobilize participants, supporters or even opponents using legacies of the Communist past. In this text we seek to uncover how various situations, events or people are constructed as public enemies by using the communist legacy. In particular, we ask the following questions: How is anti-communist framing constructed and how does anti-communist framing resonate with popular images and understanding of Communism, the Communist era in the Czech Republic and related matters? We analyse anti-communist framing (i.e. directly or indirectly identify the situation, adversaries, institutions or activities with the Communist regime) and via constructing metaphors provide readers with deep understanding of how particular Communist legacies in specific contexts create public enemies who lose sympathy and support from the public.
Links
GA16-10163S, research and development project |
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