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How do political regimes respond to the challenges emanating from
youth mobilization? This book seeks to understand regime resilience
and breakdown by analysing the public meaning of youth, as well as
the physical mobilization of young people. Mobilization carried by
young people is a key component in understanding the stabilisation
of the authoritarian regime structures in contemporary Russia, but
the Russian experience makes only sense if placed in its broader
historical context.Three comparative cases, the breakdown of the
authoritarian Soviet Union, the breakdown of the democratic Weimar
Republic, and the crisis of the democratic regime in France around
1968 highlight how regimes which lacked popular support have
compensated for their insufficient legitimacy by trying to mobilize
youth symbolically and politically. This book illustrates the
symbolic significance of youth and its role in regime crisis by
analysing a new data set of newspaper articles with a new method of
discourse analysis. The combination of qualitative interpretation
and quantitative network analysis enables a deeper and more
systematic understanding of discursive structures about youth.
Through this methodological innovation the book contributes to the
way we define the categories of youth, generation, and crisis. It
makes the case that our conceptualisation should reflect the way
terms are being used - usages that can be captured in a systematic
way with new methods of discourse analysis. Oxford Studies in
Democratization is a series for scholars and students of
comparative politics and related disciplines. Volumes concentrate
on the comparative study of the democratization process that
accompanied the decline and termination of the cold war. The
geographical focus of the series is primarily Latin America, the
Caribbean, Southern and Eastern Europe, and relevant experiences in
Africa and Asia. The series editor is Laurence Whitehead, Senior
Research Fellow, Nuffield College, University of Oxford.
This volume contends that young individuals across Europe relate to
their country's history in complex and often ambivalent ways. It
pays attention to how both formal education and broader culture
communicate ideas about the past, and how young people respond to
these ideas. The studies collected in this volume show that such
ideas about the past are central to the formation of the group
identities of nations, social movements, or religious groups. Young
people express received historical narratives in new, potentially
subversive, ways. As young people tend to be more mobile and ready
to interrogate their own roots than later generations, they
selectively privilege certain aspects of their identities and their
identification with their family or nation while neglecting others.
This collection aims to correct the popular misperception that
young people are indifferent towards history and prove instead that
historical narratives are constitutive to their individual
identities and their sense of belonging to something broader than
themselves.
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