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Acknowledgements

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© 2010 John Benjamins B.V. / Association Internationale de Littérature Comparée

© 2010 John Benjamins B.V. / Association Internationale de Littérature Comparée

Chapters in this book

  1. Prelim pages i
  2. Table of contents v
  3. Acknowledgements ix
  4. List of illustrations xi
  5. General Introduction 1
  6. Figures of national poets
  7. Introduction 11
  8. Adam Mickiewicz as a Polish National Icon 19
  9. Petofi: Self-Fashioning, Consecration, Dismantling 40
  10. Mácha, the Czech National Poet 56
  11. Mihai Eminescu: The Foundational Truth of a Dual Lyre 86
  12. France Prešeren: A Conquest of the Slovene Parnassus 97
  13. Petar II Petrovic Njegoš: The Icon of the Poet with the Icon 110
  14. Hristo Botev and the Necessity of National Icons 117
  15. Bialik, Poet of the People 128
  16. Figurations of the family
  17. Introduction 133
  18. Family Trauma and Domestic Violence in Twentieth-Century Estonian Literature 140
  19. In Search of the Mother’s Voice 154
  20. Daughter Figures in Latvian Women’s Autobiographical Writing of the 1990s 167
  21. Figuring the Motherland and Staging the Party Father in Bulgarian Literature 176
  22. Gendering the Body of the Lithuanian Nation in Maironis’s Poetry 183
  23. František Palacký, the Father Figure of Czech Historiography and Nation Building 193
  24. Miloš Crnjanski’s Homecoming to a Migrating National Family 211
  25. Figures of female identity
  26. Introduction 221
  27. Women at the Foundation of Romanian Literary Culture 229
  28. Constructing a Woman Author within the Literary Canon 241
  29. Gender and War in South Slavic Literatures 253
  30. Women’s Memory and an Alternative Kosovo Myth 261
  31. Women’s Corpuses, Corpses or (Cultural) Bodies 271
  32. Berta Bojetu-Boeta’s Feminist Dystopias 281
  33. Figures of the Other
  34. Introduction 289
  35. How Did the Golem Get to Prague? 296
  36. How Did the Golems (and Robots) Enter Stage and Screen and Leave Prague? 308
  37. Vámbéry, Stoker, and Dracula 321
  38. Lasting Legacies 333
  39. Czech Feminist Anti-Semitism 344
  40. Figuring the Other in Nineteenth-Century Czech Literature 367
  41. Killing with Metaphors 378
  42. Love, Magic, and Life 391
  43. The Alienated and Uprooted Tlushim 402
  44. Figures of outlaws
  45. The Rural Outlaws of East-Central Europe 407
  46. Juraj Jánošík 441
  47. Shifting Images of the Bulgarian Haiduti 457
  48. Figures of trauma
  49. Introduction 461
  50. Remembrances of the Past and the Present 463
  51. ‘Goli Otok’ Literature 478
  52. Traumas of World War II 484
  53. Performing Identity 504
  54. Figures of mediation
  55. Introduction 515
  56. Joseph Eötvös 521
  57. On the Ethnic Border 527
  58. Two Regionalists of the Interwar Period 539
  59. Journeys to the Other Half of the Continent 549
  60. Epilogue
  61. East-Central European Literature after 1989 561
  62. Works cited 631
  63. Index 695
  64. List of Contributors to Volume 4 707
  65. Errata for volumes 1-3 709
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