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2. Time and Space in the Café Griensteidl and the Café Central
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Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- Contents v
- List of Illustrations vii
- Preface xi
- Introduction 1
- 1. The Cafés of Vienna: Space and Sociability 9
- 2. Time and Space in the Café Griensteidl and the Café Central 32
- 3. ‘The Jew Belongs in the Coffeehouse’: Jews, Central Europe and Modernity 50
- 4. Coffeehouse Orientalism 59
- 5. Between ‘The House of Study’ and the Coffeehouse: The Central European Café as a Site for Hebrew and Yiddish Modernism 78
- 6. Michalik’s Café in Kraków: Café and Caricature as Media of Modernity 98
- 7. The Coffeehouse in Zagreb at the Turn of the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries: Similarities and Differences with the Viennese Coffeehouse 122
- 8. Adolf Loos’s Kärntner Bar: Reception, Reinvention, Reproduction 138
- 9. Graphic and Interior Design in the Viennese Coffeehouse around 1900: Experience and Identity 158
- 10. The Cliché of the Viennese Café as an Extended Living Room: Formal Parallels and Differences 178
- 11. Coffeehouses and Tea Parties: Conversational Spaces as a Stimulus to Creativity in Sigmund Freud’s Vienna and Virginia Woolf ’s London 199
- Notes on Contributors 221
- Selected Bibliography 224
- Index 229
Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- Contents v
- List of Illustrations vii
- Preface xi
- Introduction 1
- 1. The Cafés of Vienna: Space and Sociability 9
- 2. Time and Space in the Café Griensteidl and the Café Central 32
- 3. ‘The Jew Belongs in the Coffeehouse’: Jews, Central Europe and Modernity 50
- 4. Coffeehouse Orientalism 59
- 5. Between ‘The House of Study’ and the Coffeehouse: The Central European Café as a Site for Hebrew and Yiddish Modernism 78
- 6. Michalik’s Café in Kraków: Café and Caricature as Media of Modernity 98
- 7. The Coffeehouse in Zagreb at the Turn of the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries: Similarities and Differences with the Viennese Coffeehouse 122
- 8. Adolf Loos’s Kärntner Bar: Reception, Reinvention, Reproduction 138
- 9. Graphic and Interior Design in the Viennese Coffeehouse around 1900: Experience and Identity 158
- 10. The Cliché of the Viennese Café as an Extended Living Room: Formal Parallels and Differences 178
- 11. Coffeehouses and Tea Parties: Conversational Spaces as a Stimulus to Creativity in Sigmund Freud’s Vienna and Virginia Woolf ’s London 199
- Notes on Contributors 221
- Selected Bibliography 224
- Index 229