In:History of the Literary Cultures of East-Central Europe: Junctures and disjunctures in the 19th and 20th centuries
Edited by Marcel Cornis-Pope and John Neubauer
[Comparative History of Literatures in European Languages XIX] 2004
► pp. vii–x
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Published online: 28 May 2004
https://doi.org/10.1075/chlel.xix.toc
https://doi.org/10.1075/chlel.xix.toc
Table of contents
Editors’ Preface
Preface by the General Editor of the Literary History Project
Note on Documentation and Translation
In Preparation
General introduction
Geography and borders
Part I: Nodes of political time
198939
From resistance to reformulation
1989 in Poland: Continuity and Caesura
Reversals of the postmodern and the late Soviet simulacrum in the Baltic Countries — with exemplifications from Estonian literature
Models of literary and cultural identity on the margins of (post)modernity: The case of pre-1989 Romania
Quoting instead of living: Postmodern literature before and after the changes in East-Central Europe
1956/196883
Revolt, suppression, and liberalization in Post-Stalinist East-Central Europe
1948107
Introduction: The Culture of Revolutionary Terror
Romanian literature under Stalinism
The retraumatization of the 1948 communist purges in Yugoslav literary culture
Heritage and inheritors: The literary canon in totalitarian Bulgaria
1918177
Overview
Women writers and the war experience: 1918 as transition
The footsteps of Gavrilo Princip: The 1914 Sarajevo assault in fiction, history, and three monuments
Beyond Vienna 1900: Habsburg identities in Central Europe
The Great War as a monstrous carnival: Jaroslav Hašek’s Švejk
Polish literature of World War I: Consciousness of a breakthrough
1867/1878/1881
1848
1776/1789293
Introduction
The spirit of 1776: Polish and Dalmatian declarations of philosophical independence
The cultural legacy of empires in Eastern Europe
The Jacobin Movement in Hungary (1792–95)
1789 and Bulgarian Culture
Part II: Histories of literary form
Shifting periods and trends321
Between Classicism and Romanticism: The year 1820 in Polish literature
From modernization to modernist literature
Czech Decadence
The Avant-garde in East-Central European literature
Shifting genres375
Literary reportage: Between and beyond art and fact
Gardens of the mind, places for doubt: Fictionalized autobiography in East-Central Europe
Subversion and self-assertion: The role of Kotliarevshchyna in Russian-Ukrainian literary relations
Poeticizing prose in Croatian and Serbian Modernism
Stanislav Vinaver: Subversion of, or intervention in literary history?
The birth of modern literary theory in East-Central Europe
Polish poetry in the twentieth century
Polish-Jewish literature: An outline
Shifting perspectives and voices in the Romanian novel
Forms of the Bulgarian novel
The historical novel463
Introduction
The Hungarian historical novel in regional context
Recent historical novels and historiographic metafiction in the Balkans
The historical novel in Slovenian literature
The search for a modern, problematizing historical consciousness: Romanian historical fiction and family cycles
The family novel in East-Central Europe: Illustrated with works by Isaac B. Singer and Włodzimierz Odojewski
Histories of multimedia constructions513
National operas in East-Central Europe
East-Central European cinema and literary history
The silent tale of fury: Stalinism in Yugoslav cinema
Central Europe’s catastrophes on film: The case of István Szabó
Works cited
Index of East-Central-European Names: Volume 1
