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  1. Feb 23, 2018 · What is Eastern Europe. Eastern Europe is the east region of the European continent. However, all countries that were behind the Iron Curtain (the boundary dividing Europe into two separate areas from the end of World War II until the end of the Cold War) before its fall are broadly classified as being a part of Eastern Europe.

  2. Apr 11, 2019 · As Western European states have also adopted much more restrictive policies and the number of new arrivals has diminished, the difference between East and West is now much smaller than it used to be. The reluctance to give up national sovereignty to develop stronger EU structures and policies is widely shared today.

  3. The shortest answer to the question posed by the title is, yes, it does. But this answer is only partially true. A truer answer, but still only partially true, is that it does and does not. And the real answer is, I think, that it does exist but is only one among the many dividing lines that criss-cross Europe and it may not be the most ...

  4. Mar 17, 2023 · East Central Europe is a region that imagined itself as a space between, constructing historiographies of bulwarks and borderlands. When European modernity started to be synonymous with imperial powers, central and eastern parts of the continent found themselves even more ambiguously in the off-centre position.

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  6. Mar 17, 2023 · With regard to the difference between East Central Europe and Western Europe, he emphasised the structures of the “second serfdom” that had become entrenched since the early modern period. This is what he sees as the reason for the slowed socio-economic modernisation, which has continued to have an effect up to the present day.

    • Claudia Kraft
    • claudia.kraft@univie.ac.at
  7. In the West’s philosophic geography, Eastern Europe was Europe and non-Europe at the same time. The opposition between liberal democracies and socialist—later post-socialist—societies has been the dominant political framing of this divide since the end of the Second World War. The West was the model for the East.

  8. Oct 18, 2020 · They also sensed and equivocally thematised the West's “marginalisation” of East Central Europe, reminding them of the centre–periphery relations that paved the way to Russia's (and later to the Soviet Union's) domination of Europe's Eastern half (for reviews of these arguments, see Gagyi, 2016; Zarycki, 2014). 4