Discourses of Collective Identity in Central and Southeast Europe (1775-1945): Texts and Commentaries: Volume 3/2, Representations of National Culture
✍ Scribed by Ahmet Ersoy; Vangelis Kechriotis; Maciej Górny
- Publisher
- Central European University Press
- Year
- 2011
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 403
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
✦ Table of Contents
Cover
Series title page
Title page
Copyright page
List of contributors, consultants, translators
Table of Contents
Editorial note
Chapter I. Cultural modernization: Institutionalization of “national sciences”
Nikolaos Politis: Study on the life of modern Greeks
The Austro-Hungarian Monarchy in word and picture
Ilarion Ruvarac: On prince Lazar
Dimitar Marinov: Living antiquity
Zsolt Beöthy: The small mirror of Hungarian literature
Şemseddin Sami: Turkish lexicon
Eugen Lovinescu: The history of modern Romanian civilization
Boyan Penev: History of new Bulgarian literature
Afet İnan: Prolegomena to an outline of Turkish history
Vladimir Levstik: The mission of language
Dimitrie Gusti: The science of nation
Chapter II. The “Critical turns”: Subverting the Romantic narratives
Józef Szujski: Some truths from our history
Titu Maiorescu: Against the contemporary direction in Romanian culture
Michał Bobrzyński: The outline of Polish history
Garabet Ibrăileanu: The critical spirit in Romanian culture
Giorgos Skliros: Our social question
Bohdan Pavlů: Progressivism and conservativism in Slovakia
Josef Pekař: The meaning of Czech history
Jovan Skerlić: The new youth magazines and our new generations
Giorgos Theotokas: Free spirit
Emanuel Rádl: The war between Czechs and Germans
Branko Merxhani: The organization of the chaos
Chapter III. Literary representations of the “national character”
Henryk Sienkiewicz: With fire and sword; Teutonic knights
Aleko Konstantinov: Bay Ganyo
Ion Luca Caragiale: Rromanian man and Rromanian woman
Alexandros Papadiamantis: Easter chanter
Ömer Seyfeddin: Primo, the Turkish child
Ştefan Zeletin: The national character of donkeys
Jaroslav Hašek: The good soldier Švejk
Robert Musil: The man without qualities
Gjergj Fishta: The highland lute
Miroslav Krleža: The Banquet in Blitva
Aleksander Kamiński: Stones for the rampart
Chapter IV. Aesthetic modernism and collective identities
Ioannis Psicharis: My journey
The Czech modern
Artur Górski: Young Poland
Endre Ady: I am the son of king Gog of Magog; Song of the Hungarian Jacobin
Dimo Kyorchev: Our sorrows
Antun Gustav Matoš: Art and nationalism
Ladislav Novomeský: The current state and the development of Slovak culture
Millosh Gjergj Nikolla: We, the sons of the new age; The highlander recital
Tevfik Fikret: Haluk’s credo
Witold Gombrowicz: Ferdydurke
George Seferis: Α Greek–Makriyannis
Chapter V. Regionalism, autonomism and the minority identity-building narratives
Hovsep Vartanian: The constiutitonal truths
Celadet Alî Bedirxan: The Kurdish question, its origins and causes
Krste Petkov Misirkov: On Macedonian matters
Metropolitan Andrzej Szeptycki: Address delivered at House of Lords in Vienna
Károly Kós: Transylvania
Romul Boilă: Study on the reorganization of the unified Romanian state
Josef Pfitzner: Sudeten German history
Resolution of the Muslims of Banjaluka
📜 SIMILAR VOLUMES
This volume represents the first in a series of four books, a daring project by CEU Press, which presents the most important texts that triggered and shaped the processes of nation-building in the many countries of Central and Southeast Europe. The series brings together scholars from Austria, Alban
Presents and illustrates the development of the ideologies of nation states, the "modern" successors of former empires