Postcolonial Europe

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The Discourse of Europe and the Search for a European Identity

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The current "discourse of Europe" features an effort to "identify" a Europe that is good and noble, capable of serving as a spiritual basis for a new and (let us not fear the term) post-modernist economic system based on consumerism, multinational capitalism, and commitment to what is euphemistically called "the free market". This quest for a Europe that is good and noble and therefore worthy to provide the ethos of a new kind of community (at once democratic and cultivated, both socialistic and capitalistic, Christian and humanistic, scientific and pious) is motivated in large part by the desire to redeem the Europe of the fathers from the onus of guilt born of an awareness that "Europe" had been responsible for the new forms of social violence spawned in the "rotten twentieth century" (Timothy Garton Ash’s term).
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Modern Polish Literature Through a Postcolonial Lens

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Castorp by Pawel Huelle, Poland's most accomplished contemporary writer [Halikowska-Smith, 2003] has frequently been interpreted as a counterpart to Thomas Mann's The Magic Mountain. A reader of Mann's novel may remember that before his arrival at Davos, Hans Castorp spent four terms as a student at the Danzig Polytechnic. It is around this digression that Huelle builds his plot, inserting into the biography of Mann's protagonist an extensive Gdansk-based episode.

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In Search of Dracula or, Cultures in Dialogue

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In Dracula, Bram Stoker's famous Victorian horror novel, the young British lawyer Jonathan Harker sets out on a journey eastward. When the hero crosses the Danube andenters Transylvania in order to finalize a contract with a local count on the purchase of a piece of real estate in London, he notes a number of disquieting details.
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The Soviet and the Post-Soviet Discourses of Contemporary Ukraine: Literary Scholarship, the Humanities and the Russian-Ukrainian Interface

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The two main topics proposed by this volume-colonialism and postcolonialism on the one hand and Sovietology (which I understand here primarily as the study of the Soviet legacy) on the other-involve broad and important areas which have a special relevance for contemporary Ukraine in general and for Ukrainian studies in particular.
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Between the "Reset Button" and "Recommit Button": Messages and Challenges to Ukraine's European Future

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Interview with Janusz Bugajski, Director of the New European Democracies Project and senior fellow in the Europe Program at the Center for Strategic and International Studies, Washington, DC
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Central and Eastern Europe from a Postcolonial Perspective

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The term "postcolonialism" is used today as a collective term for various kinds of theoretical approach that take a critical attitude towards the problems of knowledge, politics and cultural collision. Postcolonial studies, which have become popular as a consequence of literary research, are not confined today merely to literary studies.
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Newsflash

Appearance and Essence in History. According to The "Last Novel" by Teodor Parnicki.
There are no translations available.
Stefan Szymutko

Regardless of whether we are dealing with expansionism and exploitation (as in colonialism), or with overcoming their effects (as in postcolonialism), that is with the task of rebuilding of identity, it is politics that decides about culture. We abandoned long ago any illusions, if we ever had them (the philosophers of the Greek polis did not), that thought rules over itself. In the 19th century, Hegel proved that the modern state and its culture are a single entity, and in the 20th. Foucault states even more sharply, that governance (power) is the creator of knowledge. Therefore, there are no problems separate from life, and no writing beyond politics. The most abstract ideas are formulated within the most real of realities, and never without connection to it, even when thinking apparently takes its own course.
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