Only one must-read this weekend from here in soon-to-be-stormy Appalachia:
A Warning From Europe: The Worst Is Yet to Come, an epic, semi-autobiographical article by historian Anne Applebaum in The Atlantic magazine.
Ms. Applebaum has written extensively on the former Soviet Union and East Bloc, including a book that was really seminal for me, called Between East and West: Across the Borderlands of Europe, about a 1991 road trip across just collapsed eastern Europe. A Washington Post columnist married to Radek Sikorsky, a former Polish Foreign Minister, she’s uniquely positioned to write a first-person account of the changes in Poland over the past not quite thirty years.
And there have been astonishing changes. On my first trip to Warsaw, in March and April of 1992, state-owned enterprises, the stores in the buildings that lined the streets, had largely gone bust, and newly private commerce from Gdansk on the Baltic Sea to Tiranë, Albania on the Adriatic, was largely carried out through an ad-hoc system of hastily-assembled kiosks between the storefronts and the streets, Here is an example from near the Warsaw train station, a snapshot from 1992:
Today Warsaw presents as a modern, if still Stalinesque architecture-afflicted city.
But all is not well, in Poland or as Ms. Applebaum describes, Hungary and other parts of eastern Europe as well. Her article is well worth your time as a marker of the state of the region today. Especially if, as we look to be here, you are shut indoors with a storm raging outside.
Next week we return to Africa with a post on 3 Quarks Daily at the beginning of the week. I will repost it here next Wednesday. See you next week.
Bookmarking this yo read. Anne Applebaum’s commentary in this area is consistently on point. Great Warsaw photos.
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It’s a formidable 20,000-ish word article. It’s engaging because it’s a little more personal than straight reportage.
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Sounds good! I haven’t read the book you mentioned (sounds great) but read two of her in-depth histories and they definitely weren’t personal. Will get around to reading it this weekend :)
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Have a great weekend:)
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Likewise. Love your Madagascar stuff!
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Thanks, it was an epic journal:)
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