The article discusses the application of postcolonial theory to the postcommunist situation, something that a number of authors are attempting to do - most notably Ewa Thompson, who connects this analysis with a cultural and political project for contemporary Poland. The article looks at the possible ways in which postcolonial perspectives can be used to analyse national identity in "Europe between Pan-Germanism and Pan-Slavism", and specifically in the Czech context.
It then devotes itself to a genealogical reading of Milan Kundera's essay on Central Europe, and ends with a discussion on the usefulness of the postcolonial perspective for the analysis of post-communism. It concludes that this perspective is a fertile source of inspiration for comparative hypotheses and research questions, but that its full acceptance may be both methodologically and politically problematic.
The "authenticity" of Central Europe has been constructed by the dominant Central European spokespeople in opposition to the "subaltern empires" of Germany and Russia as "more Western than the West".