Vladimir Tismaneanu: Introduction;
PART ONE: Picking Up the Pieces: 1968 between Memory and Theory
Martin Palous: Revolutions and Revolutionaries, Lessons of the Years of Crises (Three Czech Encounters with Freedom);
Irena Gross: 1968 in Poland: Spoiled Children, Marxists, and Jews;
Dick Howard: In Search of a New Left;
Jeffrey C. Isaac: Rethinking the Political Scientifically: Brief Reflections on 1968 by a Child of the Seventies;
Jan-Werner Müller: What Did They Think They Were Doing? The Political Thought of (the West European) 1968 Revisited;
Aurelian Craiutu: Thinking Politically:
Raymond Aron and the 1968 Moment in France;
Karol Edward Soltan: The Divided Spirit of the Sixties;
PART TWO: Lessons and Legacies of 1968
Agnes Heller: The Year 1968 and Its Results: An East European Perspective;
Jiri Pehe: The Prague Spring 1968: Post-Communist Reflections;
Bradley Abrams: From Revisionism to Dissent: The Creation of Post-Marxism in Central Europe in the Wake of 1968;
Tereza-Brîndusa Palade: Post-Marxist Mentality and the Intellectual Challenge to Ideology after 1968;
Nick Miller: Yugoslavia’s 1968: The Great Surrender;
Cristian Vasile: 1968 Romania: Intellectuals and the Failure of Reform
PART THREE: 1968 in Pieces: Case Studies of Transformation
Vladimir Tismaneanu and Bogdan Iacob: Betrayed Promises: Nicolae Ceausescu, the Romanian Communist Party, and the Crisis of 1968;
Mark Kramer: The Kremlin, the Prague Spring, and the Brezhnev Doctrine;
Jeffrey Herf: 1968 and the Terrorist Aftermath in West Germany;
Victor Zaslavsky: The Prague Spring: Resistance and Surrender of the PCI;
Catalin Avramescu: “Don’t Push Us, Comrade!” De Gaulle in Bucharest;
Charles S. Maier: Conclusion: 1968—Did It Matter?