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so using Germans as the Other would be very problematic.

Yet, it was used regularly by the parties in the previous Polish government and the media associated with them [including, what a cynical hypocrisy, a tabloid owned by Axel Springer Verlag]. Polish Euroscepticism is in no small part Germanophobia. On this insane Right, there is substantial anti-semitism, too.

Many Czechs actually believe that the best things they got as a nation were brought in by Germans.

But, there is also the issue of the Sudeten Germans (throwing them out was a very concrete act of nation building, but so was the mythology of resistant Czechs and colaborating Sudeten-Germans built to support it 'morally'), the issue of on-going conflict with refugee organisations and Bavaria and Austria ('foreign meddling'), the Temelín conflict with Austria (which, the way I read it, was seen in the Czech Republic as one about Austria trying to lord over Czechs, too), and German multinationals buying up national symbol companies. In addition, for The Other, there are Gypsies...

*Lunatic*, n.
One whose delusions are out of fashion.

by DoDo on Sun Nov 15th, 2009 at 08:21:13 AM EST
[ Parent ]
I'm told by my Polish acquaintances that even in twins Germanophobia was less virulent than Russophobia, but cannot judge for myself. In the Czech Republic where I do live, Benes decrees are remembered mostly by politicians and officials at some pre-specified days during a year. Russia is invoked in seemingly unrelated contexts daily, by journalists and lay people. That's the biggest difference.

And of course, using gypsies as the official Other is non-PC. It still happens, but gets rarer and rarer.

by Sargon on Sun Nov 15th, 2009 at 10:52:19 AM EST
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