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White But Not Quite
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17 May 2022

Since the ‘migration crisis’ of 2016, long-simmering tensions between the Western members of the European Union and its ‘new’ Eastern members – Poland, the Czech Republic, Slovakia, and Hungary – have proven to be fertile ground for rebellion against liberal values and policies.
In this startling and original book Ivan Kalmar argues that Central European illiberalism is a misguided response to the devastating effects of global neoliberalism, which arose from the area’s brutal transition to capitalism in the 1990s.
Kalmar argues that dismissive attitudes towards ‘Eastern Europeans’ are a form of racism and explores the close relation between racism towards Central Europeans and racism by Central Europeans: a people white but not quite.
Introduction: Race, Illiberalism, Central Europe
1. How Eastern Europeans Became Less White
2. How Central Europeans Became Eastern European
3. How Central Europeans Became Central European (Time and Time Again)
4. Central Europe: Half-Truths and Facts
5. The Last of the White Men: Central Europe’s White Innocence
6. ‘Have Eastern Europeans No Shame?’ Anti-Semitism, Racism, and Homophobia in Central Europe
7. Imitators Spurned: Why the West Needs Central Europe to Stay in its Eastern European Place
8. ‘We Will Not Be a Colony!’
9. Slavia Prague v. Glasgow Rangers: Lessons from a Football Match
Conclusion: When the Migrants Come
Postscript: Confessions of a Canadian Central European