History of the literary cultures of East-Central Europe : junctures and disjunctures in the 19th and 20th centuries
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History of the literary cultures of East-Central Europe : junctures and disjunctures in the 19th and 20th centuries
(Histoire comparée des littératures de langues européennes = A comparative history of literatures in European languages, 19-20)
J. Benjamins Pub., 2004-
- v. 1 : US
- v. 1 : Eur.
- v. 2
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Osaka University International Studies Library
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Faculty of Letters Library, University of Tokyo現文
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Includes bibliographical references and indexes
Description and Table of Contents
- Volume
-
v. 1 : US ISBN 9781588114938
Description
Table of Contents
- 1. Editors' Preface
- 2. Preface by the General Editor of the Literary History Project
- 3. Note on Documentation and Translation
- 4. In Preparation
- 5. General introduction (by Cornis-Pope, Marcel)
- 6. Geography and borders (by Magocsi, Paul Robert)
- 7. Part I: Nodes of political time
- 8. 1989
- 9. From resistance to reformulation (by Cornis-Pope, Marcel)
- 10. 1989 in Poland: Continuity and Caesura (by Bolecki, Wlodimierz)
- 11. Reversals of the postmodern and the late Soviet simulacrum in the Baltic Countries - with exemplifications from Estonian literature (by Annus, Epp)
- 12. Models of literary and cultural identity on the margins of (post)modernity: The case of pre-1989 Romania (by Spiridon, Monica)
- 13. Quoting instead of living: Postmodern literature before and after the changes in East-Central Europe (by Krasztev, Peter)
- 14. 1956/1968
- 15. Revolt, suppression, and liberalization in Post-Stalinist East-Central Europe (by Cornis-Pope, Marcel)
- 16. 1948
- 17. Introduction: The Culture of Revolutionary Terror (by Longinovic, Tomislav Z.)
- 18. Romanian literature under Stalinism (by Guran, Letitia)
- 19. The retraumatization of the 1948 communist purges in Yugoslav literary culture (by Kirin, Renata Jambresic)
- 20. Heritage and inheritors: The literary canon in totalitarian Bulgaria (by Kiossev, Alexander)
- 21. 1945 (by Cornis-Pope, Marcel)
- 22. 1918
- 23. Overview (by Neubauer, John)
- 24. Women writers and the war experience: 1918 as transition (by Higonnet, Margaret R.)
- 25. The footsteps of Gavrilo Princip: The 1914 Sarajevo assault in fiction, history, and three monuments (by Snel, Guido)
- 26. Beyond Vienna 1900: Habsburg identities in Central Europe (by Arens, Katherine)
- 27. The Great War as a monstrous carnival: Jaroslav Hasek's Svejk (by Ambros, Veronika)
- 28. Polish literature of World War I: Consciousness of a breakthrough (by Kielak, Dorota)
- 29. 1867/1878/1881 (by Neubauer, John)
- 30. 1848 (by Neubauer, John)
- 31. 1776/1789
- 32. Introduction (by Neubauer, John)
- 33. The spirit of 1776: Polish and Dalmatian declarations of philosophical independence (by Wolff, Larry)
- 34. The cultural legacy of empires in Eastern Europe (by Slapsak, Svetlana)
- 35. The Jacobin Movement in Hungary (1792-95) (by Voigt, Vilmos)
- 36. 1789 and Bulgarian Culture (by Peleva, Inna)
- 37. Part II: Histories of literary form
- 38. Shifting periods and trends
- 39. Between Classicism and Romanticism: The year 1820 in Polish literature (by Koropeckyj, Roman)
- 40. From modernization to modernist literature (by Krasztev, Peter)
- 41. Czech Decadence (by Pynsent, Robert B.)
- 42. The Avant-garde in East-Central European literature (by Bojtar, Endre)
- 43. Shifting genres
- 44. Literary reportage: Between and beyond art and fact (by Kuprel, Diana)
- 45. Gardens of the mind, places for doubt: Fictionalized autobiography in East-Central Europe (by Snel, Guido)
- 46. Subversion and self-assertion: The role of Kotliarevshchyna in Russian-Ukrainian literary relations (by Grabowicz, George G.)
- 47. Poeticizing prose in Croatian and Serbian Modernism (by Masek, Miro)
- 48. Stanislav Vinaver: Subversion of, or intervention in literary history? (by Slapsak, Svetlana)
- 49. The birth of modern literary theory in East-Central Europe (by Tihanov, Galin)
- 50. Polish poetry in the twentieth century (by Nieukerken, Arent van)
- 51. Polish-Jewish literature: An outline (by Adamczyk-Garbowska, Monika)
- 52. Shifting perspectives and voices in the Romanian novel (by Cornis-Pope, Marcel)
- 53. Forms of the Bulgarian novel (by Penchev, Boyko)
- 54. The historical novel
- 55. Introduction (by Neubauer, John)
- 56. The Hungarian historical novel in regional context (by Hites, Sandor)
- 57. Recent historical novels and historiographic metafiction in the Balkans (by Lukic, Jasmina)
- 58. The historical novel in Slovenian literature (by Grdina, Igor)
- 59. The search for a modern, problematizing historical consciousness: Romanian historical fiction and family cycles (by Cornis-Pope, Marcel)
- 60. The family novel in East-Central Europe: Illustrated with works by Isaac B. Singer and Wlodzimierz Odojewski (by Mitosek, Zofia)
- 61. Histories of multimedia constructions
- 62. Introduction (by Neubauer, John)
- 63. National operas in East-Central Europe (by Neubauer, John)
- 64. East-Central European cinema and literary history (by Iordanova, Dina)
- 65. The silent tale of fury: Stalinism in Yugoslav cinema (by Dakovic, Nevena)
- 66. Central Europe's catastrophes on film: The case of Istvan Szabo (by Arens, Katherine)
- 67. Works cited
- 68. Index of East-Central-European Names: Volume 1
- Volume
-
v. 1 : Eur. ISBN 9789027234520
Description
Table of Contents
- 1. Editors' Preface
- 2. Preface by the General Editor of the Literary History Project
- 3. Note on Documentation and Translation
- 4. In Preparation
- 5. General introduction (by Cornis-Pope, Marcel)
- 6. Geography and borders (by Magocsi, Paul Robert)
- 7. Part I: Nodes of political time
- 8. 1989
- 9. From resistance to reformulation (by Cornis-Pope, Marcel)
- 10. 1989 in Poland: Continuity and Caesura (by Bolecki, Wlodimierz)
- 11. Reversals of the postmodern and the late Soviet simulacrum in the Baltic Countries - with exemplifications from Estonian literature (by Annus, Epp)
- 12. Models of literary and cultural identity on the margins of (post)modernity: The case of pre-1989 Romania (by Spiridon, Monica)
- 13. Quoting instead of living: Postmodern literature before and after the changes in East-Central Europe (by Krasztev, Peter)
- 14. 1956/1968
- 15. Revolt, suppression, and liberalization in Post-Stalinist East-Central Europe (by Cornis-Pope, Marcel)
- 16. 1948
- 17. Introduction: The Culture of Revolutionary Terror (by Longinovic, Tomislav Z.)
- 18. Romanian literature under Stalinism (by Guran, Letitia)
- 19. The retraumatization of the 1948 communist purges in Yugoslav literary culture (by Kirin, Renata Jambresic)
- 20. Heritage and inheritors: The literary canon in totalitarian Bulgaria (by Kiossev, Alexander)
- 21. 1945 (by Cornis-Pope, Marcel)
- 22. 1918
- 23. Overview (by Neubauer, John)
- 24. Women writers and the war experience: 1918 as transition (by Higonnet, Margaret R.)
- 25. The footsteps of Gavrilo Princip: The 1914 Sarajevo assault in fiction, history, and three monuments (by Snel, Guido)
- 26. Beyond Vienna 1900: Habsburg identities in Central Europe (by Arens, Katherine)
- 27. The Great War as a monstrous carnival: Jaroslav Hasek's Svejk (by Ambros, Veronika)
- 28. Polish literature of World War I: Consciousness of a breakthrough (by Kielak, Dorota)
- 29. 1867/1878/1881 (by Neubauer, John)
- 30. 1848 (by Neubauer, John)
- 31. 1776/1789
- 32. Introduction (by Neubauer, John)
- 33. The spirit of 1776: Polish and Dalmatian declarations of philosophical independence (by Wolff, Larry)
- 34. The cultural legacy of empires in Eastern Europe (by Slapsak, Svetlana)
- 35. The Jacobin Movement in Hungary (1792-95) (by Voigt, Vilmos)
- 36. 1789 and Bulgarian Culture (by Peleva, Inna)
- 37. Part II: Histories of literary form
- 38. Shifting periods and trends
- 39. Between Classicism and Romanticism: The year 1820 in Polish literature (by Koropeckyj, Roman)
- 40. From modernization to modernist literature (by Krasztev, Peter)
- 41. Czech Decadence (by Pynsent, Robert B.)
- 42. The Avant-garde in East-Central European literature (by Bojtar, Endre)
- 43. Shifting genres
- 44. Literary reportage: Between and beyond art and fact (by Kuprel, Diana)
- 45. Gardens of the mind, places for doubt: Fictionalized autobiography in East-Central Europe (by Snel, Guido)
- 46. Subversion and self-assertion: The role of Kotliarevshchyna in Russian-Ukrainian literary relations (by Grabowicz, George G.)
- 47. Poeticizing prose in Croatian and Serbian Modernism (by Masek, Miro)
- 48. Stanislav Vinaver: Subversion of, or intervention in literary history? (by Slapsak, Svetlana)
- 49. The birth of modern literary theory in East-Central Europe (by Tihanov, Galin)
- 50. Polish poetry in the twentieth century (by Nieukerken, Arent van)
- 51. Polish-Jewish literature: An outline (by Adamczyk-Garbowska, Monika)
- 52. Shifting perspectives and voices in the Romanian novel (by Cornis-Pope, Marcel)
- 53. Forms of the Bulgarian novel (by Penchev, Boyko)
- 54. The historical novel
- 55. Introduction (by Neubauer, John)
- 56. The Hungarian historical novel in regional context (by Hites, Sandor)
- 57. Recent historical novels and historiographic metafiction in the Balkans (by Lukic, Jasmina)
- 58. The historical novel in Slovenian literature (by Grdina, Igor)
- 59. The search for a modern, problematizing historical consciousness: Romanian historical fiction and family cycles (by Cornis-Pope, Marcel)
- 60. The family novel in East-Central Europe: Illustrated with works by Isaac B. Singer and Wlodzimierz Odojewski (by Mitosek, Zofia)
- 61. Histories of multimedia constructions
- 62. Introduction (by Neubauer, John)
- 63. National operas in East-Central Europe (by Neubauer, John)
- 64. East-Central European cinema and literary history (by Iordanova, Dina)
- 65. The silent tale of fury: Stalinism in Yugoslav cinema (by Dakovic, Nevena)
- 66. Central Europe's catastrophes on film: The case of Istvan Szabo (by Arens, Katherine)
- 67. Works cited
- 68. Index of East-Central-European Names: Volume 1
- Volume
-
v. 2 ISBN 9789027234537
Description
Table of Contents
- 1. Editors' Preface
- 2. Acknowledgements
- 3. Note on Documentation and Translation
- 4. Table of contents, Volume I
- 5. In preparation
- 6. Introduction: Mapping the Literary Interfaces of East-Central Europe (by Cornis-Pope, Marcel)
- 7. CITIES AS SITES OF HYBRID LITERARY IDENTITY AND MULTICULTURAL PRODUCTION
- 8. Introduction: Representing East-Central Europe's Marginocentric Cities (by Cornis-Pope, Marcel)
- 9. Vilnius/Wilno/Vilna: the Myth of Division and the Myth of Connection (by Venclova, Tomas)
- 10. The Tartu/Tallinn Dialectic in Estonian Letters and Culture (by Kirss, Tiina)
- 11. Monuments and the Literary Culture of Riga (by Novikova, Irina)
- 12. Czernowitz/Cernauti/Chernovtsy/Chernivtsi/Czerniowce: A Testing Ground for Pluralism (by Colin, Amy)
- 13. 'The City that Is No More, the City that Will Stand Forever': Danzig/Gdansk as Homeland in the Writings of Gunter Grass, Pawel Huelle, and Stefan Chwin (by Jerzak, Katarzyna)
- 14. On the Borders of Mighty Empires: Bucharest, City of Merging Paradigms (by Spiridon, Monica)
- 15. Literary Production in Marginocentric Cultural Node: The Case of Timisoara (by Cornis-Pope, Marcel)
- 16. Plovdiv: The Text of the City vs. the Texts of Literature (by Kiossev, Alexander)
- 17. The Torn Soul of a City: Trieste as a Center of Polyphonic Culture and Literature (by Campanile, Anna)
- 18. Topographies of Literary Culture in Budapest (by Neubauer, John)
- 19. Prague: Magnetic Fields or the Staging of the Avant-Garde (by Ambros, Veronika)
- 20. Cities in Ashkenaz: Sites of Identity, Cultural Production, Utopic or Dystopic Visions (by Wolitz, Seth L.)
- 21. 2. REGIONAL SITES OF CULTURAL HYBRIDIZATION
- 22. Introduction: Literature in Multicultural Corridors and Regions (by Cornis-Pope, Marcel)
- 23. The Literary Cultures of the Danubian Corridor
- 24. Mapping the Danubian Literary Mosaic (by Cornis-Pope, Marcel)
- 25. Upstream and Downstream the Danube (by Neubauer, John)
- 26. The Intercultural Corridor of the 'Other' Danube (by Verona, Roxana M.)
- 27. B. Regions as Cultural Interfaces
- 28. Transylvania's Literary Cultures: Rivalry and Interaction (by Neubauer, John)
- 29. The Hybrid Soil of the Balkans: A Topography of Albanian Literature (by Elsie, Robert)
- 30. Up and Down in Croatian Literary Geography: The Case of Krugovasi (by Biti, Vladimir)
- 31. Ashkenaz or the Jewish Cultural Presence in Central and Eastern Europe (by Wolitz, Seth L.)
- 32. Representing Transnational (Real or Imaginary) Regional Spaces
- 33. The Return of Pannonia as Imaginary Topos and Space of Homelessness (by Snel, Guido)
- 34. Jan Lam and Marie von Ebner-Eschenbach: Galicia in the Historical Imagination of Nineteenth-Century Writers (by Nance, Agnieszka)
- 35. Macedonia in Bulgarian Literature (by Peleva, Inna)
- 36. Transformations of Imagined Landscapes: Istra and Savrinija as Intercultural Narratives (by Mihelj, Sabina)
- 37. 3. THE LITERARY RECONSTRUCTION OF EAST-CENTRAL EUROPE'S IMAGINED COMMUNITIES: NATIVE TO DIASPORIC
- 38. Introduction: Crossing Geographic and Cultural Boundaries, Reinventing Literary Identities (by Cornis-Pope, Marcel)
- 39. Kafka, Svejk, and the Butcher's Wife, or Postcommunism/ Postcolonialism and Central Europe (by Petkovic, Nikola)
- 40. Tsarigrad/Istanbul/Constantinople and the Spatial Construction of Bulgarian National Identity in the Nineteenth Century (by Penchev, Boyko)
- 41. Paradoxical Renaissance Abroad: Ukrainian Emigre Literature, 1945-1950 (by Grabowicz, George G.)
- 42. Paris as a Constitutive East-Central European Topos: The Case of Polish and Romanian Literature (by Spiridon, Monica)
- 43. A Tragic One-Way Ticket to Universality: Bucharest - Paris - Auschwitz, or the Case of Benjamin Fundoianu (by Berindeanu, Florin)
- 44. Works Cited
- 45. Index of East-Central European Names: Vol. 2
- 46. List of Contributors
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