Transformative Podcast
Transformative Podcast
recet
1989 and the Great Transformation (Jannis Panagiotidis)
18 minutes Posted Jan 28, 2026 at 9:44 am.
Opening: Global repercussions of East-Central Europe and the USSR
Podcast Intro and RedCet Introduction
Hosts and Handbook Project Overview
Routledge Release and Project Background
Conceptual Foundations: RedCet and Transformation
Polanyi and the Great Transformation Reference
Key Mechanisms: The Double Movement
1989 as a Pivot and the Second Great Transformation
Decentering 1989: Four Main Takeaways
Temporal Findings: 1970s as an Alternative Starting Point
Spatial Findings: Global Context and Comparisons
China as a Comparative Case
Cuba and Wider Global Repercussions
East-Central Europe as a Testing Ground and Co-transformation
Handbook Structure: Eight Sections and Themes
Editing Process and Workshop Development
Gaps Identified: War and Conflict
Gaps Identified: Environment and Sustainability
Emergence of Populism in Contributions
Re-embedding, Protectionism, and Reactionary Politics
Debates on Periodization and Whether Transformation is Complete
Variation in Tempo and Localized Transformations
Closing Invitation to Read the Handbook
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Show notes
The Routledge Handbook of 1989 and the Great Transformation analyzes the pivotal year of 1989 and the transformation processes that resulted from a historical perspective. It brings research done over the past five years at the Research Center for the History of Transformations (RECET) into dialogue with cutting-edge scholarship by political scientists, sociologists, historians, literary scholars and anthropologists at institutions across Europe and beyond. In this episode of the Transformative Podcast, two of the handbook’s editors Rosamund Johnston and Jannis Panagiotidis (both RECET) talk through the four main arguments made by the book: that the “great transformation” presented here started earlier than 1989; that its legacies linger in spaces, practices, and objects; that in order to grasp the scale of what happened around 1989, it is important to bring Eastern and Central Europe into conversation with other global regions; and that the former Eastern Bloc served as an important node in a larger, global transformation. They also reflect upon how the events of that momentous year can be used as a hinge to explore longer-term processes of economic, social, political, and cultural transformation linked to the rise of neoliberalism and globalization since the 1970s. Find out more about the Routledge Handbook.
Rosamund Johnston is a postdoctoral researcher at RECET. She is the author of Red Tape: Radio and Politics in Czechoslovakia, 1945-1969 (Stanford UP, 2024) and Havel v Americe (Host, 2019).
Jannis Panagiotidis is the Scientific Director of RECET. He wrote the books: Antiosteuropäischer Rassismus in Deutschland (Anti-East European Racism in Germany) (Beltz/Juventa, 2024), The Unchosen Ones. Diaspora, Nation, and Migration in Israel and Germany (Indiana UP, 2019) and Postsowjetische Migration in Deutschland: Eine Einführung (Beltz/Juventa, 2021).