You have not been recognized as a subscriber to the AHR online. About 243 words from this article are provided below; about 522 words remain.
 
If you are a individual member of the American Historical Association, you may:
• login here if you have already registered for online access.
• Or if you're already logged in register your subscription.
• Set up your online account for the first time. AHA members can go to the AHA individual membership section to locate their member numbers.

If you are not a member of the American Historical Association, you can:
• Join the AHA and receive many member benefits including print and electronic issues of the American Historical Review.
• Purchase a research pass to gain two hour access to the entire History Cooperative web site. You will have full access to current issues of the American Historical Review (104.3-present). Note: the Research Pass does not provide access to JSTOR's holdings of the American Historical Review.

Instititutions can:
• Subscribe to this journal and receive print and electronic issues.
• Activate your existing subscription so that we recognize your IP number ranges.
| Book Review | The American Historical Review, 105.3 | The History Cooperative
105.3  
Journals link Search link Partners link Information link
June, 2000
 
The American Historical Review

Table of contents
List journal issues
Home
Get a printer-friendly version of this page
 
 


Book Review



Methods/Theory



Maria Todorova. Imagining the Balkans. New York: Oxford University Press. 1997. Pp. xi, 257. $19.95.

If we posit that the historian outraged at a stereotype read back into the past for political purposes can best respond by reading that stereotype properly and painstakingly forward, then Maria Todorova has largely succeeded. Her much-discussed volume responds superlatively to that challenge in its first five chapters on evolving perceptions of the Balkans there as well as in the West, and in the seventh chapter on what she considers to be the region's most distinctive historical feature: the Ottoman legacy. Todorova's indignation over contemporary issues predominates early in her introduction and throughout chapter six and the conclusion. She begins and ends with an indictment of George F. Kennan's preface to The Other Balkan Wars, a 1993 edition of the Carnegie Endowment's 1913 report on the two Balkan Wars of 1912–1913. To her, both preface and new edition stand for a particularly American disposition to view the Balkans as a hopeless, uncivilized whole. But just how representative Kennan's dismissal of "unruly" democratic strivings in the newly independent Balkan states even before the Balkan Wars is, given his preference for monarchic authority before 1914, should not detain us. Nor should the author's well-argued objections in chapter six to the idea of a "good" Central Europe, somehow minus Germany, that Czech, Hungarian, and Polish intellectuals advanced during the late 1980s and early 1990s. . . .


There are about 522 more words in this article. Please log in (or, if you are not yet an authorized user, please go to the User Setup page) to gain full access rights. Or if you're already logged in register your subscription.