Format:
Online-Ressource (xi, 714 p)
,
col. ill
Edition:
Online-Ausg. 2010 Electronic reproduction; Available via World Wide Web
ISBN:
9789027234582
Series Statement:
History of the Literary Cultures of East-Central Europe v. 4
Content:
Types and stereotypes is the fourth and last volume of a path-breaking multinational literary history that incorporates innovative features relevant to the writing of literary history in general. Instead of offering a traditional chronological narrative of the period 1800-1989, the History of the Literary Cultures of East-Central Europe approaches the region's literatures from five complementary angles, focusing on literature's participation in and reaction to key political events, literary periods and genres, the literatures of cities and sub-regions, literary institutions, and figures of rep
Note:
Description based upon print version of record
,
HISTORY OF THE LITERARY CULTURES OF EAST-CENTRAL EUROPE; Editorial page; Title page; LCC data; Contents; Acknowledgments; List of Illustrations; General introduction; Introduction; Adam Mickiewicz as a Polish National Icon; Petofi: Self-Fashioning, Consecration, Dismantling; Mácha, the Czech National Poet; Mihai Eminescu: The Foundational Truth of a Dual Lyre; France Prešeren: A Conquest of the Slovene Parnassus; Petar II Petrovic Njegoš: The Icon of the Poet with the Icon; Hristo Botev and the Necessity of National Icons; Bialik, Poet of the People; Introduction
,
Family trauma and domestic violence in twentieth-century Estonian literatureIn search of the mother's voice; Daughter figures in Latvian women's autobiographical writing of the 1990s; Figuring the motherland and staging the party father in Bulgarian literature; Gendering the body of the Lithuanian nation in Maironis's poetry; František Palacký, the father figure of Czech historiography and nation building; Miloš Crnjanski's homecoming to a migrating national family; Introduction; Women at the foundation of Romanian literary culture; Constructing a woman author within the literary canon
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Gender and war in South Slavic literaturesWomen's memory and an alternative Kosovo myth; Women's corpuses, corpses or (cultural) bodies; Berta Bojetu-Boeta's feminist dystopias; Introduction; How did the Golem get to Prague?; How did the Golems (and Robots) enter stage and screen and leave Prague?; Vámbéry, Stoker, and Dracula; Lasting legacies; Czech feminist anti-semitism; Figuring the other in Nineteenth-century Czech literature; Killing with metaphors; Love, magic and life; The alienated and uprooted Tlushim; The rural outlaws of East-Central Europe; Juraj Jánošík
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Shifting images of the Bulgarian haidutiIntroduction; Remembrances of the past and the present; 'Goli Otok' literature; Traumas of World War II; Performing identity; Introduction; Joseph Eötvös; On the ethnic border; Two regionalists of the Interwar Period; Journeys to the other half of the continent; East-Central European literature after 1989; Note on Documentation and Translation; Index; List of Contributors to Volume 4; Errata for Volumes 1-3
,
Electronic reproduction; Available via World Wide Web
Additional Edition:
9789027287861
Additional Edition:
Print version History of the Literary Cultures of East-Central Europe : Junctures and disjunctures in the 19th and 20th centuries. Volume 4: Types and stereotypes
Language:
English
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