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Quoting instead of living

Postmodern literature before and after the changes in East-Central Europe
  • Péter Krasztev
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© 2004 John Benjamins B.V. / Association Internationale de Littérature Comparée

© 2004 John Benjamins B.V. / Association Internationale de Littérature Comparée

Chapters in this book

  1. Prelim pages i
  2. Table of contents vii
  3. Editors’ Preface xi
  4. Preface by the General Editor of the Literary History Project xiii
  5. Note on Documentation and Translation xvii
  6. In Preparation xix
  7. General introduction 1
  8. Geography and borders 19
  9. Part I. Nodes of political time
  10. Introduction to Part I 33
  11. 1989
  12. From resistance to reformulation 39
  13. 1989 in Poland 51
  14. Reversals of the postmodern and the late Soviet simulacrum in the Baltic Countries — with exemplifications from Estonian literature 54
  15. Models of literary and cultural identity on the margins of (post)modernity 65
  16. Quoting instead of living 70
  17. 1956/1968
  18. Revolt, suppression, and liberalization in Post-Stalinist East-Central Europe 83
  19. 1948
  20. Introduction 107
  21. Romanian literature under Stalinism 112
  22. The retraumatization of the 1948 communist purges in Yugoslav literary culture 124
  23. Heritage and inheritors 132
  24. 1945 143
  25. 1918
  26. Overview 177
  27. Women writers and the war experience 191
  28. The footsteps of Gavrilo Princip 202
  29. Beyond Vienna 1900 216
  30. The Great War as a monstrous carnival 228
  31. Polish literature of World War I 236
  32. 1867/1878/1881 241
  33. 1848 263
  34. 1776/1789
  35. Introduction 293
  36. The spirit of 1776 294
  37. The cultural legacy of empires in Eastern Europe 307
  38. The Jacobin Movement in Hungary (1792–95) 311
  39. 1789 and Bulgarian Culture 313
  40. Part II. Histories of literary form
  41. Shifting periods and trends
  42. Between Classicism and Romanticism 325
  43. From modernization to modernist literature 332
  44. Czech Decadence 348
  45. The Avant-garde in East-Central European literature 364
  46. Shifting genres
  47. Literary reportage 375
  48. Gardens of the mind, places for doubt 386
  49. Subversion and self-assertion 401
  50. Poeticizing prose in Croatian and Serbian Modernism 409
  51. Stanislav Vinaver 414
  52. The birth of modern literary theory in East-Central Europe 416
  53. Polish poetry in the twentieth century 424
  54. Polish-Jewish literature 435
  55. Shifting perspectives and voices in the Romanian novel 441
  56. Forms of the Bulgarian novel 456
  57. The historical novel
  58. Introduction 463
  59. The Hungarian historical novel in regional context 467
  60. Recent historical novels and historiographic metafiction in the Balkans 480
  61. The historical novel in Slovenian literature 493
  62. The search for a modern, problematizing historical consciousness 499
  63. The family novel in East-Central Europe 505
  64. Histories of multimedia constructions
  65. Introduction 513
  66. National operas in East-Central Europe 514
  67. East-Central European cinema and literary history 524
  68. The silent tale of fury 541
  69. Central Europe’s catastrophes on film 548
  70. Works cited 559
  71. Index of East-Central-European Names 623
  72. List of Contributors 645
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