Karl Schlögel
is professor of eastern European history at the Viadrina University, Frankfurt/Oder. His latest publication is Terror und Traum. Moskau 1937 [Terror and dream. Moscow 1937] (Munich 2008), for which he has been awarded the Leipziger Buchpreis zur Europäischen Verständigung 2009 (Leipzig book prize for European understanding 2009).
Eurozine Articles
Places and strata of memory
Approaches to eastern Europe
The idea of 1989 as an annus mirabilis is too crude; rather, it was the result of a long incubation period that took a different course in each Eastern Bloc country. Karl Schlögel asks whether it is too soon to start talking of a "common European history". [more]
Archipelago Europe
Instead of two homogeneous European regions -- "the East" and "the West" -- there are now fragments, enclaves, and islands. From Baden-Baden to Bucharest, Majorca to Moscow, Karl Schlögel experiences Europe as a series of spaces both distinct and connected. [more]
The futility of one professor's life
Otto Hoetzsch and German Russian studies
Otto Hoetzsch, eastern Europe scholar and founder of the journal Osteuropa, was defamed during WWII as a "parlour Bolshevik". His pan-European perspective suffered its final defeat with the division of Europe. [more]
Voyage to Brno
An archeology of the inter-war modern
Central eastern European modernism in the 1930s was an aesthetic declaration of war on the style of the defeated empires. With the resurgence of "civil Europe" after 1989, the White Modern has renewed significance. [more]
Europe tests its boundaries
A searching movement
With the disappearance of the Iron Curtain, the entire system of coordinates in Europe has changed. The East no longer exists; but what has emerged in its place is neither the old nor the new. [more]
Moscow and Berlin in the 20th century
The fortunes of two cities
Moscow and Berlin on their way to becoming global cities. [more]


















