Skip to the main content

Original scientific paper

https://doi.org/10.20901/pm.59.4.11

Communicative Dimensions of Centre-Periphery Relationships: Communicating the Post-1989 Traumatic Conjuncture in the Balkans and the Future of Europe

Zlatan Krajina ; Faculty of Political Sciences, University of Zagreb


Full text: english pdf 300 Kb

page 251-275

downloads: 394

cite


Abstract

This paper surveys the post-1989 Europe/Balkan conjuncture from the perspective ‎of communication studies. I employ David Morley’s materialist definition ‎of communication, encompassing exchange/movement of information/‎ideas, goods, and people. Observing the exchange of ideas, we find EU’s Euroscepticism ‎contrasting the Balkans’ Europhilia. Considering the movement ‎of people, the brain-drain from the Balkans is paralleled by incoming migrations ‎and a questioning of whether leaving the region is necessarily advantageous.‎ The movement of goods, finally, elucidates the ascendancy of Chinese ‎investment in the region, confronting Europe with being seen as a periphery‎ of Asia. The materialist communication approach thus reveals unanticipated‎ dynamism (a working-through of inherited inequality), rather than one-way ‎perpetuation of old centre-periphery prejudice. Though historically modelled‎ as Europe’s traumatized inner Other where nationalism was imposed, the Balkans ‎still have much to narrate about impurity of identities and uncertainty as‎ Europe’s new/old possible cultural heritage.‎

Keywords

Communication; Identity; Balkans; Europe; Periphery

Hrčak ID:

288226

URI

https://hrcak.srce.hr/288226

Publication date:

22.12.2022.

Visits: 1.119 *