By MANUELA ACHILLES | It is historically misleading to describe Eurovision as a peace project born directly from the ruins of WWII. It was established as a technical rather than a political initiative. Today, it is the largest cultural event bringing Europeans together on a single occasion to consume the same product. It is Europe’s biggest election.
Tag: issue001
By MANUELA ACHILLES and PETER DEBAERE | This year’s contest, with its official motto “United by Music,” takes place against a troubling geopolitical backdrop that is redefining Europe’s position in the world. This rapidly shifting context is characterized by the convergence of military conflict, economic realignment, and intensifying cultural contestation.
By MANUELA ACHILLES and PETER DEBAERE | Participation in Eurovision functions as a para-diplomatic practice expressing and constituting European belonging. It has functioned as a cultural register of political alignment, allowing countries to signal orientation toward Europe without formal institutional commitment.
By LUCA CIAN | Eurovision is not simply a song contest. It is one of the most ambitious experiments in brand-building anywhere in the world—one that simultaneously manages a global masterbrand, dozens of national sub-brands, and a fragile, emotional community called Europe.
By IVAN RAYKOFF | The European Song Contest invites audiences to recognize the strangeness of foreign cultures while discovering shared connection across difference. Its values of diversity and inclusivity are especially meaningful at a time when geopolitical conflict challenges Europe’s postwar order.
By CATHERINE BAKER | Eurovision has built a unique reputation as a space where queer and gender non-conforming musicians can be symbolically affirmed as representatives of their respective nations in front of an audience of more than 160 million viewers.
By ELLA JACKSON | Eurovision’s performances have increasingly combined standardized song structures with elaborate visual spectacle. While the contest partly reflects Anglo-American musical trends and global pop aesthetics, it also celebrates local and continental forms of Europeanness.
By ZVI GILBOA | Against the backdrop of recent controversies surrounding Israel’s participation in the Eurovision Song Contest, it is easy to overlook the extent to which Eurovision occupies a central place in Israeli cultural life.
By JOHN PICKLES | In making women’s stories central rather than treating them as add‑ons to the biographies of male leaders, Ioffe produces a rich genealogy of the Soviet and Russian twentieth century in which reproductive politics, everyday survival, and domestic arrangements are placed alongside the changing scope of professional roles women played in Soviet society.
By KEREM COŞAR | With Eurovision voting patterns unfolding according to the gravity relationship principle, an unkind context emerged for the songs Türkiye brought to the competition for most of the first two decades of its participation.
Translated by ALLISON M. CHARETTE | Hira is coming to settle the memory and pain. He is in the room where he was born. In Ambohipo. Antananarivo. In a few hours, he will set off on the journey to return to his father. Out in Mahajanga.
Translated by LISA C. HAYDEN | Even a little girl from a world where everyone else has brown eyes wanted blue eyes. Blue ones like some of the sultans’ wives or Turkish actresses had, probably after receiving the blueness from mothers, grandmothers, and great-grandmothers.
By KYRILL KUNAKHOVICH | The Intervision Song Contest was to be a showcase for a new and gentler form of rule: what Czechoslovak politicians would soon term “socialism with a human face.” The only reason it has ever existed is that its organizers were excluded from Eurovision.
By NOBUHIRO NAKANISHI | I unify elements of time and space into this work of creation and repeat the act of filling up the visible and the invisible simultaneously.
This month’s recent book recommendations by GlobalEurope editors EDINA PALEVIQ, HÉLÈNE B. DUCROS, and NICHOLAS OSTRUM: Read about why nations go to war, the rise of a global physical culture, and the necessity for a global political reset.
By HÉLÈNE B. DUCROS and NICK OSTRUM | Energy humanities have to be more than a good citizen revolt against oil and a steady march towards the sanctuary of electricity. They are a falling forward to the unknown, open to the practitioner, lay person, scholar, and any entrepreneur trying to make something happen in the energy space.
By JOHN PICKLES | At the core of the desire for transformation is a fundamental demographic challenge, revolving around the kind of future young Bulgarians can hope for. The mobilization of social media and symbolic politics shaped the protest movement in ways that other parts of Europe and beyond may well need to pay attention to.
Environmental Activism in a Region at War: Interviews with Greenpeace Natalia Gozak (Ukraine) and Meglena Antonova (Bulgaria)
By ELIZABETH B. JONES | The damage to the Black Sea’s aquatic ecosystem and the Kakhovka Dam breach are the most extreme examples of what many scientific and legal experts now call Russia’s ecocide against Ukraine and, indeed, the entire region.
Translated by JESSIE MENDEZ SAYER | Seaside towns are more antisocial, more hesitant to change, there’s less gossip. Nobody can say, not even the local authorities, or the neighbors with their houses they passed down for several generations, what goes on inside the fortresses facing the breakwater.
By DOMINIQUE LUTRINGER | Through restrained modulations of color and line, pictorial spaces are constructed where light drifts, shadows hesitate, and the viewer is invited into a quiet, attentive form of looking.
This month’s recent book recommendations by GlobalEurope editors HÉLÈNE B. DUCROS, EDINA PALEVIQ, and OKSANA ERMOLAEVA: Read about Indigenous art at the Venice Biennale, media in the disinformation age, and forced labor in the modern world.
Translated by TRISTRAM WOLFF and JEFFERSON CHASE | He pulls me along at his pace, and whistling and skipping we arrive in Saint-Tropez, where the harbor is full of sails flapping like flags; we end up at a little restaurant with gaily checked curtains, tablecloths and plates.
By JULIA KHREBTAN-HÖRHAGER | The present moment reveals how fragile Europe’s post-historical confidence proved to be. Questions of sovereignty, territorial revisionism, democratic resilience, and state violence have re-entered political life.
By SARAH WOLFF | Is the EU moving towards a model of migration governance increasingly shaped by deterrence, externalization, and geopolitical bargaining rather than fundamental rights protection?
By SUZANA VULJEVIC | On first read, the irreverence and iconoclasm of Petrović’s lyricism appealed to me. While the high register, antiquated language, and occasional play on words found in the original threw me, Petrović the man was familiar and recognizable to me as a figure who fit squarely within Robert Wohl’s delineation of the generation of 1914.
By VICTOR TAKI | The history of the late seventeenth- and early eighteenth-century conflicts in and around Canada demonstrates certain deviations from the Western European military pattern emerging at the time.Small war, as practiced by the French and their Indigenous allies against English colonies in the 1690s, was strongly criticized by contemporary English military historians and later on by American and Anglo-Canadian historians.
By KUNLING ZHANG | Slowbalization is the result of a deliberate political choice by right-wing populist governments. Economic and geoeconomic factors have certainly played a role too.
Defining the “European Defence Technological Industrial Base”: The Emergence of a Transnational Field under Dependencies
By SAMUEL B. H. FAURE | Arms production in Europe is mainly carried out by private companies, due to the liberalization of all national armament policies there.
By GRIGORI KHISLAVSKI | In the run-up to and aftermath of the annexation of Crimea, Putin’s rhetoric started featuring theological imagery that ultimately found its way into the constitution via amendments.
The Wider Impact of Russia’s Full-Scale Invasion of Ukraine: Insights from Georgia’s Contested Borderland with Abkhazia
By GAËLLE LE PAVIC | Contested borders constitute a particularly pronounced phenomenon in Eastern Europe and the South Caucasus, where unresolved conflicts and wars after the collapse of the Soviet Union have generated enduring disputes over sovereignty and statehood.
By MAGALI CHESNEL | Camargue’s salt marshes and ponds have become oases for the greater flamingo. This series is a minimalist immersion into the intimacy of this emblematic bird, which feeds there and flies above landscapes of fragile beauty.
GlobalEurope looks back and picks its favorite literary translations published in 2025.
Translated by TESS LEWIS | Horsetails swayed on the bank, stretching their heads toward the water and behind them, barberries glowed on the hedge through the dark tree trunks.
By PAUL O’KEEFFE and CLAIRE MacEVILLY | Education is increasingly being called upon to foster ecological literacy, social cohesion, and community resilience.
By POMPEO DELLA POSTA | The EU is uniquely situated to play a moderating role in the confrontation between the US and China, given its geopolitical influence, economic power, and commitment to multilateralism.
By DAVID BERRIDGE | The books discussed here chart a shift from the individual photograph to a reckoning with the “cacophonous energy” of our historical and contemporary image worlds.
Translated by OLIVIA OLSEN | listen to / open beaks / open wounds / their terror in the nets / in the steel wire snares…
This month’s recent book recommendations by GlobalEurope editors Oksana Ermolaeva and Edina Paleviq
By HÉLÈNE B. DUCROS | The Russian invasion was made possible because of our very system of production and resource use.
By JULIA KHREBTAN-HÖRHAGER | Throughout modern history, the indoctrination and militarization of young people have proven central to the consolidation of non-democratic regimes.
By LIEVEN ENGELEN | Like silent witnesses of a present rooted in one of the darkest days of Europe.
By METEHAN TEKINIRK | Europe’s pivotal moment is part of a broader process, a fundamental shift in world politics.
By BEE LEHMAN and TOM VAN NUENEN | Scholars must understand the scope of what exists in a digital environment to be conscious of inherent biases and interpretative limitations in their research.
Trade Policy as an Assertion of National Power: Reading Hirschman to Understand the Donald Trump Administration
By PETER DEBAERE and MANUELA ACHILLES | Trade policy can serve as a deliberate instrument of political power even when it runs counter to the economic interests of the country imposing it.
Translated by AQIIL M. GOPEE with JEFFREY DITEMAN | A milky glow, the gauze of dawn, had begun to appear, vaguely wafting over the edges of the Orient.
Translated by LISA HOFMANN-KURODA | Perhaps the desire to learn another language as an adult is simply a nostalgic yearning for that time in infancy when we had completely unrestricted movement over our tongue and lips.
By ANDREW MARTINO | At what point does an author, especially one of tremendous renown, sacrifice a right to privacy?
By CRAIG WILLIS | Every European league contains clubs situated in areas with regional or minority language contexts.
By SOPHIA KALASHNIKOVA HOROWITZ | The volume assesses informer effectiveness in controlling and limiting religious life in the USSR.
This month’s recent book recommendations by GlobalEurope editors Nick Ostrum, Hélène B. Ducros, Edina Paleviq, and Oksana Ermolaeva.
