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Turkish and Hungarian Turanism against Russia in the Post-Cold War Era: Nostalgia Revisits Central Asia

This review article is based on three books: Starting with Von Eschen a professor of history at the University of Virginia in Virginia U.S. who has already published extensively on U.S. diplomacy, culture, and decolonization. Her book, Paradoxes of Nostalgia: Cold War Triumphalism and Global Disorder since 1989, could be considered as the summary of her typical interest field. In this book, Von Eschen displayed a strong critical stance towards Fukuyama’s “The End of History” thesis. According to Von Eschen, the early celebrations of the U.S.’ so-called victory with the end of the Cold War pushed U.S. foreign policy to take a ‘blind’ stance towards new trends in the international system.

Turkish and Hungarian Turanism against Russia in the Post-Cold War
 

 

 

 

Paradoxes of Nostalgia: Cold War Triumphalism and
Global Disorder since 1989

By Penny M. Von Eschen

Duke University Press, 2022, 400 pages, $30.95, ISBN: 9781478022848

 

Go East! A History of Hungarian Turanism

By Balázs Ablonczy

Indiana University Press, 2022, 296 pages, $33.25, ISBN: 9780253057433

 

The Sources of Russian Foreign Policy Assertiveness

By Angela Borozna

Springer, 2022, 279 pages, $106.13, ISBN: 9783030835903

 

 

The polarity changes in the international system in the early 1990s due to the end of the Cold War was not limited to a U.S.-centered geopolitical transformation. It also brought with it an extremely determined ideological excitement. The life of this paradigm, which gained an ‘iconic’ place in the IR literature with Fukuyama’s “The End of History” thesis, was shorter than expected. Although the challenge against neo-liberal and capitalist values ​​is identified with the 9/11 attacks in the case of fundamentalism, the real dynamic that causes ‘history to continue’ is independent of the phenomena of terrorism and violence. ‘Nostalgia,’ which revived as a reflective phenomenon in the foreign political minds of actors with an imperial past, such as Türkiye, Russia, and Hungary, should be considered the most concrete challenge to U.S.-centrism in the present day. More clearly, romantic nationalism in actors with an imperial past in the historical process represents a highly reflective identity that is likely to be triggered in the future. This situation often manifests itself as a strong emphasis on the ‘past’ in the foreign policy discourses and practices of the mentioned actors. These discourses, which are extremely motivating for the public, turn into a perfect harmony between the public’s expectations and foreign policy discourses after a certain period of time. These discourses, which generally target the hegemony of the dominant power in the international system, are actually evaluated in a revisionist context towards the status quo.

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