Notes from the EU’s Eastern Edge

Jo Harper

Jo Harper

Notes from the EU’s Eastern Edge

How Migrants Were Weaponized on the Polish-Belarusian Border

Notes from the EU's Eastern Edge is a bold, singular book—auto-ethnography with analytic bite, theoretically literate without scholasticism, and ethically self-aware. Along the Belarus–Poland frontier, it shows how Kremlin “migration engineering” met a ready-made European script of fear, pride, and denial. In border forests—and in newsrooms, museums, classrooms—it traces how memory politics and securitized compassion turn migrants into symbols, while bilingual gatekeepers launder hard edges into “responsible” discourse. The book’s core contribution is to shift Polish-populism studies from monist typologies to a processual account of a dialectical, polycentric regime of managed antagonisms—refusing the easy pejorative of “populism” and retaining an emancipatory horizon. Vivid reportage sits with compact documentary mini-cases to show how trauma, sovereignty and solidarity are being rewritten at Europe’s edge. Definitive for debates on borders, memory and the political unconscious in Central Europe.
Forthcoming publication. Pre-orders will open a few weeks before publication date.
Author

Jo Harper

Jo Harper is a British journalist based in Warsaw, freelancing for various international agencies. He also teaches at the American Studies Center, part of Warsaw University and holds a PhD from the London school of Economics. He has written three books on Polish politics, also published into Polish and German.
Title
Notes from the EU’s Eastern Edge
Subtitle
How Migrants Were Weaponized on the Polish-Belarusian Border
Author
Price
€ 134,00 excl. VAT
ISBN
9789048574278
Format
Hardback
Number of pages
318
Language
English
Publication date
Dimensions
15.6 x 23.4 cm
Categories
Eastern Central Europe
History
Political Science
Discipline
Academic - Social Sciences
Imprint
Table of Contents
Show Table of ContentsHide Table of Contents
Acknowledgments
Preface
Questions
Explanatory frameworks
Methods
PART 1 WHEN MOSES CAME TO POLAND
PART 2 THE WALLS CLOSE IN
PART 3 PAIN AND ITS CRITICS
PART 4 AN OTHER POLAND
PART 5 THE WEST’S EASTERN BORDERLAND
PART 6 BEYOND THE PALE
PART 7 TRAUMA: KILL OR CURE?
PART 8 THE DIALECTICS OF NON-CHANGE
CONCLUSIONS
BIBLIOGRAPHY
INDEX