Many eastern Europeans feel nostalgia for the communist era
Though few really want the dictators back
“OH MY God! We had all of these!” trills Alina Radu, a 43-year-old businesswoman visiting the Romanian Kitsch Museum. She is admiring crochet doilies, a 1980s TV set, decorative glass fish and the scarves and badges of Romania’s Pioneers, a communist-era youth organisation. “I loved looking like a general!” The museum, which opened in May, has proved a hit.
This article appeared in the Europe section of the print edition under the headline “Palace insiders”
Europe October 14th 2017
- The Spanish government calls the Catalans’ bluff
- The 31-year-old who looks set to be Austria’s next chancellor
- Ties between Turkey and America are near breaking point
- France’s centre-right offers no serious opposition to Emmanuel Macron
- Poland’s president turns on his former boss
- Many eastern Europeans feel nostalgia for the communist era
- The EU will not help the Catalan secessionists’ cause
Discover more
Ursula von der Leyen has a new doctrine for handling the hard right
The boss of the European Commission embarks on a second term
Marine Le Pen spooks the bond markets
She threatens to bring down the French government, but also faces a possible ban from politics
The maths of Europe’s military black hole
It needs to spend to defend, but voters may balk
Ukraine’s warriors brace for a Kremlin surge in the south
Vladimir Putin’s war machine is pushing harder and crushing Ukrainian morale
Vladimir Putin fires a new missile to amplify his nuclear threats
The attack on Ukraine is part of a new era of missile warfare
A rise in antisemitism puts Europe’s liberal values to the test
The return of Europe’s oldest scourge