NYU
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Program
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Courses
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Modern Dissent in Central Europe: The Art of Defeat - 002
Modern Dissent in Central Europe: The Art of Defeat - 002
Totalitarian ideologies used in European political discourse in the
twentieth century to explain major historical changes have altered
forever the relationship between the state and its citizens. The
aspiration of authoritarian regimes to acquire total control over
individual lives through the control of education, employment, health
systems, media and, later, also entertainment has succeeded beyond
anything perceived possible until then in any political regime after
European Enlightenment. Nazism and Communism have mobilized irrationally
motivated mass support and won power in very short time. Their success
was partially based on mass propaganda, using fear as a primary
instinctive argument against a picture of both external and internal
enemies.
The major focus of the course will be oriented towards topics
trying to explain the reasons for mass support of totalitarian
ideologies and states on the basis of an individual’s psychology. We
will examine psychological explanations of self-victimization, the roles
of victim and perpetrator, obedience mechanisms, majority society
response to mass human rights abuses and the abusive past. Against this
background the phenomenon of political and cultural dissent will be
introduced and discussed. The role of electronic mass media in the
changes in political culture, the theory of post-modern dictatorships,
antiglobalisation movements and global terrorism are discussed as
possible modern vehicles of totalitarian tendencies and reactions
against them. The course will be a mixture of lecture, discussion and
first hand experience. Students will be expected to write two research
papers and consult their readings.