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Evgeny Morozov

Digital Democracy and its Discontents
12 - 1.30pm Room D202, Clement House, LSE 12 Jan, 2010
Evgeny Morozov is a contributing editor to Foreig... read more

Oxford Media Convention 2

Oxford Media Convention 2010
Said Business School, University of Oxford 21 Jan, 2010
In the public interest? Plotting the future of Br... read more

Lee Bollinger

'Uninhibited, Robust, and Wide-Open: A Free Press for new Century'
6.30 - 8pm Sheikh Zayed Theatre, New Academic Building, LSE 01 Feb, 2010
0 0 0 In a ... read more

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1989 Anniversary Special

Nick Thorpe Unfinished Revolution Date: 31 Dec, 2010

Tuesday 10th November from 5 - 6pm.
Come and hear Nick Thorpe, author of The Unfinished Revolution and BBC Central Europe correspondent, in the fifth installment of the Polis Media Dialogues Series. The event will be chaired by Charlie Beckett. 


Nick Thorpe began reporting from Budapest in February 1986, the first western journalist to be based there. For the BBC, the Independent, and the Observer, he covered the dying years of eastern Europe’s regimes, then the revolutions which toppled them. He witnessed the collapse of Yugoslavia, popular uprisings in Bulgaria and Serbia, the transformation of nonviolent to violent resistance in Kosovo. As the BBC's Central Europe correspondent he continues to report the successes, and the failures of a revolution which never quite reaches its goal.

The Unfinished Revolution is a personal view, from ground level, of a revolution which never quite finished. Of how it re-emerges, in demonstrations and uprisings, on a regular basis. How the demons of the past - of collaboration, of unsatisfied national identity, above all of poverty - continue to haunt the present.

Blood drips on Thorpe’s head as he tries to escape the Romanian secret police, with a dissident's statement hidden in his clothes. Then as the Hungarian government prepares to expel him, he becomes a pawn in the Cold War as the British threaten to retaliate. Through the autumn and winter of 1989, Thorpe hops from revolution to revolution, from Budapest to Prague, Leipzig to East Berlin. And gets to Romania in time for the bloody finale.

But with the victory of democracy, his work was only just beginning. Thorpe guides us through the dramas and traumas of the 1990s, the years of 'jungle capitalism' through a taxi blockade in Hungary, and the miners invasion of Bucharest. He camps with Vaclav Havel - who borrows his sleeping bag. As Yugoslavia collapses, he reports from Croatia, Bosnia, Serbia and FUROMacedonia.

The book concludes in 2009, with the impact of the crisis of capitalism, 20 years after the crisis of communism.


Keywords: Nick Thorpe, Eastern Europe, revolution, crisis, capitalism, communism