Kapitel
Lizenziert
Nicht lizenziert
Erfordert eine Authentifizierung
Tsarigrad/Istanbul/Constantinople and the Spatial Construction of Bulgarian National Identity in the Nineteenth Century
-
Boyko Penchev
Sie haben derzeit keinen Zugang zu diesem Inhalt.
Sie haben derzeit keinen Zugang zu diesem Inhalt.
Kapitel in diesem Buch
- Prelim pages i
- Table of contents v
- Editors’ Preface ix
- Acknowledgements xi
- Note on Documentation and Translation xiii
- Table of contents, Volume I xv
- In preparation xix
- Introduction 1
-
1. CITIES AS SITES OF HYBRID LITERARY IDENTITY AND MULTICULTURAL PRODUCTION
- Introduction 9
- Vilnius/Wilno/Vilna 11
- The Tartu/Tallinn Dialectic in Estonian Letters and Culture 28
- Monuments and the Literary Culture of Riga 40
- Czernowitz/Cernăuti/Chernovtsy/Chernivtsi/Czerniowce 57
- ‘The City that Is No More, the City that Will Stand Forever’ 77
- On the Borders of Mighty Empires 93
- Literary Production in Marginocentric Cultural Node 105
- Plovdiv 124
- The Torn Soul of a City 145
- Topographies of Literary Culture in Budapest 162
- Prague 176
- Cities in Ashkenaz 182
-
2. REGIONAL SITES OF CULTURAL HYBRIDIZATION
- Introduction 213
-
A. The Literary Cultures of the Danubian Corridor
- Mapping the Danubian Literary Mosaic 217
- Upstream and Downstream the Danube 224
- The Intercultural Corridor of the ‘Other’ Danube 232
-
B. Regions as Cultural Interfaces
- Transylvania’s Literary Cultures 245
- The Hybrid Soil of the Balkans 283
- Up and Down in Croatian Literary Geography 301
- Ashkenaz or the Jewish Cultural Presence in Central and Eastern Europe 314
-
C. Representing Transnational (Real or Imaginary) Regional Spaces
- The Return of Pannonia as Imaginary Topos and Space of Homelessness 333
- Jan Lam and Marie von Ebner-Eschenbach 344
- Macedonia in Bulgarian Literature 357
- Transformations of Imagined Landscapes 364
-
3. THE LITERARY RECONSTRUCTION OF EAST-CENTRAL EUROPE’S IMAGINED COMMUNITIES: NATIVE TO DIASPORIC
- Introduction 375
- Kafka, Švejk, and the Butcher’s Wife, or Postcommunism/ Postcolonialism and Central Europe 376
- Tsarigrad/Istanbul/Constantinople and the Spatial Construction of Bulgarian National Identity in the Nineteenth Century 390
- Paradoxical Renaissance Abroad 413
- Paris as a Constitutive East-Central European Topos 428
- A Tragic One-Way Ticket to Universality 443
- Works Cited 453
- Index of East-Central European Names: Vol. 2 495
- List of Contributors 511
Kapitel in diesem Buch
- Prelim pages i
- Table of contents v
- Editors’ Preface ix
- Acknowledgements xi
- Note on Documentation and Translation xiii
- Table of contents, Volume I xv
- In preparation xix
- Introduction 1
-
1. CITIES AS SITES OF HYBRID LITERARY IDENTITY AND MULTICULTURAL PRODUCTION
- Introduction 9
- Vilnius/Wilno/Vilna 11
- The Tartu/Tallinn Dialectic in Estonian Letters and Culture 28
- Monuments and the Literary Culture of Riga 40
- Czernowitz/Cernăuti/Chernovtsy/Chernivtsi/Czerniowce 57
- ‘The City that Is No More, the City that Will Stand Forever’ 77
- On the Borders of Mighty Empires 93
- Literary Production in Marginocentric Cultural Node 105
- Plovdiv 124
- The Torn Soul of a City 145
- Topographies of Literary Culture in Budapest 162
- Prague 176
- Cities in Ashkenaz 182
-
2. REGIONAL SITES OF CULTURAL HYBRIDIZATION
- Introduction 213
-
A. The Literary Cultures of the Danubian Corridor
- Mapping the Danubian Literary Mosaic 217
- Upstream and Downstream the Danube 224
- The Intercultural Corridor of the ‘Other’ Danube 232
-
B. Regions as Cultural Interfaces
- Transylvania’s Literary Cultures 245
- The Hybrid Soil of the Balkans 283
- Up and Down in Croatian Literary Geography 301
- Ashkenaz or the Jewish Cultural Presence in Central and Eastern Europe 314
-
C. Representing Transnational (Real or Imaginary) Regional Spaces
- The Return of Pannonia as Imaginary Topos and Space of Homelessness 333
- Jan Lam and Marie von Ebner-Eschenbach 344
- Macedonia in Bulgarian Literature 357
- Transformations of Imagined Landscapes 364
-
3. THE LITERARY RECONSTRUCTION OF EAST-CENTRAL EUROPE’S IMAGINED COMMUNITIES: NATIVE TO DIASPORIC
- Introduction 375
- Kafka, Švejk, and the Butcher’s Wife, or Postcommunism/ Postcolonialism and Central Europe 376
- Tsarigrad/Istanbul/Constantinople and the Spatial Construction of Bulgarian National Identity in the Nineteenth Century 390
- Paradoxical Renaissance Abroad 413
- Paris as a Constitutive East-Central European Topos 428
- A Tragic One-Way Ticket to Universality 443
- Works Cited 453
- Index of East-Central European Names: Vol. 2 495
- List of Contributors 511