書誌事項

Literature and politics in Eastern Europe

edited by Celia Hawkesworth

Macmillan Press , St. Martin's Press, 1992

  • : us
  • : uk

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注記

"Selected papers from the Fourth World Congress for Soviet and East European Studies, Harrogate, 1990"

Includes index

内容説明・目次

内容説明

Literature and politics have been closely related in Central and Eastern Europe throughout the centuries of occupation and fragmentation of its various states. Concentrating particularly on the 20th century and the position of writers under totalitarian regimes, the essays in this volume offer insights into aspects of many of the literatures of the region: Bulgarian, Czech and Slovak, Hungarian, Polish, Romanian, Ukrainian and Yugoslav. It includes reference to some earlier topics: an 18th century Polish literary response to the launching of the first Balloon and a reflection of the Germanization of Ukrainian culture giving its main focus a sense of historical perspective. Several of the essays consider questions of dissent and exile from the several prevailing Communist ideologies in the period 1945-1989. This volume is itself an historical document as the essays of which it consists were originally presented at the first international conference of Slavists to be held since the collapse of communism in East-Central Europe.

目次

  • Reception - an authorial experience, Josef Skvorecky
  • literature as criticsm of ideology in current Serbian culture, Predrag Palavestra
  • literature and politics, Dobrica Cosic
  • Slawomir Mrozek - exile and the loss of mission, Regina Grol-Prokopczyk
  • postmodernism and its histories - representations of the past in contemporary Hungarian fiction, Richard Aczel
  • recent prose of Hana Ponicka and Ol'ga Feldekova - dissident autobiography and Aesopian fiction, Norma Rudinsky
  • Milan Kundera's wisdom of uncertainty and other categorical imperatives - the experience of the contemporary Romanian novel, Michael H. Impey
  • the dilemmas of the modern Bulgarian woman in Blaga Dimitrova's novel Litze, Elka Agoston-Nikolova
  • "Silk, Scissors, Garden, Ashes" - the autobiographical writings if Irena Vrkljan and Danilo Kis, Celia Hawkesworth
  • Kazimiera Illakowiczowna - the poet as witness of history and of double national allegiance, Danuta Zamojska-Hutchins
  • Ukrainian avantgarde prose in the 20s, Myroslav Shkandrij
  • oppressed and enlightened - Ukrainians under Austro-Hungarian rule in Karl Emil Franzos' historical novel "Kampf ums Recht", Lydia Tarnavadky
  • F.D. Kniaznin and the Polish balloon, Nina Taylor
  • Karel Capek and English writers, Bohunka Bradbrook.

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