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“The Double Bind” of 1989: Reinterpreting Space, Place, and Identity in Postcommunist Women’S Literature
“THE DOUBLE BIND” OF 1989: REINTERPRETING SPACE, PLACE, AND IDENTITY IN POSTCOMMUNIST WOMEN’S LITERATURE BY JESSICA LYNN WIENHOLD-BROKISH DISSERTATION Submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in Comparative Literature in the Graduate College of the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 2010 Urbana, Illinois Doctorial Committee: Associate Professor Lilya Kaganovsky, Chair; Director of Research Professor Nancy Blake Professor Harriet Murav Associate Professor Anke Pinkert Abstract This dissertation is a comparative, cross-cultural exploration of identity construction after 1989 as it pertains to narrative setting and the creation of literary place in postcommunist women’s literature. Through spatial analysis the negotiation between the unresolvable bind of a stable national and personal identity and of a flexible transnational identity are discussed. Russian, German, and Croatian writers, specifically Olga Mukhina, Nina Sadur, Monika Maron, Barbara Honigmann, Angela Krauß, Vedrana Rudan, Dubravka Ugrešić, and Slavenka Drakulić, provide the material for an examination of the proliferation of female writers and the potential for recuperative literary techniques after 1989. The project is organized thematically with chapters dedicated to apartments, cities, and foreign lands, focusing on strategies of identity reconstruction after the fall of socialism. ii To My Family, especially Mom, Dad, Jeffrey, and Finnegan iii Table of Contents Chapter One: Introduction: “We are, from this perspective, -
SVEUČILIŠTE U RIJECI FILOZOFSKI FAKULTET Nikol Bali
View metadata, citation and similar papers at core.ac.uk brought to you by CORE provided by Repository of the University of Rijeka SVEUČILIŠTE U RIJECI FILOZOFSKI FAKULTET Nikol Bali Tijelo kao trauma u romanima Slavenke Drakulić (DIPLOMSKI RAD) Rijeka, rujan 2016. SVEUČILIŠTE U RIJECI FILOZOFSKI FAKULTET Odsjek za kroatistiku Nikol Bali Matični broj: 0009058911 Tijelo kao trauma u romanima Slavenke Drakulić DIPLOMSKI RAD Diplomski studij: Hrvatski jezik i književnost/ Filozofija Mentorica: dr. sc. Danijela Marot Kiš Rijeka, rujan 2016. Sadržaj 1. Uvod ........................................................................................................ 3 2. Slavenka Drakulić ................................................................................... 6 3. Povijest i problematika feminizma .......................................................... 7 3.1. Žena – opozicija muškarcu; drugo ....................................................................... 7 3.2. Rod kao tvorevina društva ................................................................................... 9 3.3. Problem identiteta .............................................................................................. 11 3.4. Trauma ............................................................................................................... 14 4. Kao da me nema .................................................................................... 17 4.1. Nadzor i kazna .................................................................................................. -
Building Open Society in the Western Balkans, 1991–2011
BUILDING OPEN S OPEN BUILDING BUILDING OPEN SOCIETY IN THE WESTERN BALKANS O CIETY IN THE IN WESTERN WESTERN BALKANS 19 91 – 2 0 11 BUILDING OPEN SOCIETY IN THE WESTERN BALKANS 1991–2011 The story of the Open Society Foundations’ activities during a time of transformation in Bosnia and Herzegovina, Croatia, Kosovo, Macedonia, Montenegro, Serbia, and Slovenia © 2011 by the Open Society Foundations This publication is available as a pdf on the Open Society Foundations website under a Creative Commons license that allows copying and distributing the publication, only in its entirety, as long as it is attributed to the Open Society Foundations and used for noncommercial purposes. Photographs may not be used separately from the publication. Published by the Open Society Foundations 400 West 59th Street New York, New York 10019 USA www.soros.org Produced by the Office of Communications Laura Silber, Director of Public Affairs Ari Korpivaara, Director of Publications [email protected] The Historical Highlights and Foundation Activities sections of this report were prepared by the Open Society foundations in the countries of the former Yugoslavia, the Open Society Foundations programs, and Beka Vučo, regional director for the Western Balkans. The Open Society Foundations commissioned the articles in this report. The Sarajevo Notebooks excerpts are reprinted with the permission of that journal. Articles Editor Chuck Sudetic Report Editors Ari Korpivaara, William Kramer, Laura Silber, Beka Vučo Photography Editor Pamela Chen Designer Jeanne Criscola | Criscola Design Printer GHP Media, Inc. Cover photographs FRonT covER: Mostar’s Old Bridge, originally built in 1566, was destroyed in 1993 and rebuilt in 2004 when this photograph was taken. -
In the Works of Gabriel Liiceanu and Slavenka Drakulić
“Eastern Europe”, “Balkanism” and “European-ness” in the works of Gabriel Liiceanu and Slavenka Drakulić by Anamaria Remete Submitted in accordance with the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy Creative Media Arts and Design Murdoch University 2019 I, Anamaria Remete confirm that the work presented in this thesis is my own. Where information has been derived from other sources, I confirm that this has been indicated in the thesis. i Abstract The thesis proposes a critical reading of the discourse of “Europe” and “European-ness”. I argue eastern European writers have internalized the imagery reproduced by these discourses in which “Eastern Europe” is cast as an inferior Other. With a postcolonial critique in mind I propose a critical reading of the works of two contemporary east European writers and intellectuals, Romanian Gabriel Liiceanu and Croatian Slavenka Drakulić. Intellectuals in eastern Europe have had a curious mix of responses to the discourse of “Eastern Europe” from acceptance, resistance, adaptation, transformation to rejection of “Europe”, “Eastern Europe” and “Balkanism”. They have crafted distinctly-new sites of resistance and post-socialist subjectivities, modes of inhabiting and belonging to contested geographies that previous paradigms have failed to properly capture. I argue that Liiceanu and Drakulić’s writings reveal the contested and enduring relationship that east European intellectuals have had with the idea of “Europe”. Their accounts complicate the image of a neatly divided Europe, and challenge the idea of a coherent and stable East and West. Liiceanu and Drakulić participate as agents in negotiating the idea of “Europe”. These texts are spaces in which intellectuals and political elites imagine Europe and their place in the world, articulate an entirely distinct vocabulary of belonging and exclusion. -
The Other Nearby. Experiences of Strangeness in Southeast Europe
Acta Universitatis Sapientiae, Philologica, 3, 1 (2011) 29-35 The Other Nearby. Experiences of Strangeness in Southeast Europe Anikó NOVÁK University of Szeged Department of Modern Hungarian Literature [email protected] Abstract. The paper’s aim is to present experiences of strangeness in Southeast Europe. The starting point for the analysis is an anthology entitled Die andere nebenan (The Other Next Door), which has been published in eight editions and countries. The Swedish editor Richard Swartz invited twenty-one authors from various Balkan countries to write essays about their relationship to “the Others.” The experience of strangeness on the Balkans was strongly traumatized during the Yugoslav wars in the nineties, so the writings in the examined treasury can be read as trauma texts. The determination and construction of identity has a very important role in them. The paper deals with self-identification of Aleksandar Hemon, Dragan Velikić, Miljenko Jergović, Nenad Veličković and László Végel. The two notions which can accurately determine these experiences of strangeness are internal strangeness and the familiar stranger. Keywords: the Balkans, experience of strangeness, trauma, the Other The Balkans – they are always the other people; Sartre’s well-known sentence was wittily rephrased by Rastko Močnik Slovenian sociologist. If we examine the stereotypes about this area, it is not startling that the Balkans fill the place of Hell, but the odd thing about it is the internal, Balkan point of view. The people of this region always look eastwards the Balkans, the Croatian writer Slavenka Drakulić declares. She claims that the symbolic and imaginary boundary of the Balkans moves from the Viennese Landstrasse to Trieste and Ljubljana, then to Zagreb and Sarajevo, to Belgrade, and even further towards the 29 30 A. -
”A Guided Tour Through the Museum of Communism” by Slavenka Draculic
DOI: 10.15503/jecs20131-243-256 Journal of Education Culture and Society No. 1_2013 243 Genre differentiation in A guided Tour through the Museum of Communism by Slavenka Drakulić Jakov Sabljić [email protected] Josip Juraj Strossmayer University of Osijek, Croatia Tina Varga Oswald [email protected] Josip Juraj Strossmayer University of Osijek, Croatia Abstract On the 20th anniversary of the fall of the Berlin Wall, a Croatian novelist Slavenka Dra- kulić simultaneously in several countries published a collection of essays titled A Guided Tour through the Museum of Communism. The collection consists of eight stories narrated by ani- mals: a mole, a mouse, a dog, a cat, a raven, a parrot, a pig and a bear. The animals talk about neuralgic issues of Communism in former Eastern European countries (Eastern Germany, Czechoslovakia, Poland, Rumania, Albania, Yugoslavia, Hungary and Bulgaria). The genre differentiation is based on determining postmodern variations of basic genre conventions in the process of creating a piece of literature. Fable variations are determined by analyzing the relationship between a fable and other genre forms, such as, an essay, a novella, a legend, a myth. Next to genre differentiation of a literary structure, one can also observe the differen- tiation of its role that has been conditioned by today’s cultural memory. In that manner, my- thologized persons, objects and features of Communism are analyzed as universal symbols of a message, as well as elements of a satiric play. This paper will determine in which ways the above mentioned variations enrich the existent genre forms. Key words: genre differentiation, Slavenka Drakulić, fable, ideology, mythology. -
Displaced Women
Displaced Women Displaced Women: Multilingual Narratives of Migration in Europe Edited by Lucia Aiello, Joy Charnley and Mariangela Palladino Displaced Women: Multilingual Narratives of Migration in Europe, Edited by Lucia Aiello, Joy Charnley and Mariangela Palladino This book first published 2014 Cambridge Scholars Publishing 12 Back Chapman Street, Newcastle upon Tyne, NE6 2XX, UK British Library Cataloguing in Publication Data A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library Copyright © 2014 by Lucia Aiello, Joy Charnley, Mariangela Palladino and contributors All rights for this book reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording or otherwise, without the prior permission of the copyright owner. ISBN (10): 1-4438-5528-6, ISBN (13): 978-1-4438-5528-0 TABLE OF CONTENTS Acknowledgements ................................................................................... vii Foreword .................................................................................................... ix Dialogue and Otherness Textuality of Maps, Photographs and Images: Visual Identity in Slavenka Drakulić’s Frida’s Bed ............................................................. 3 Mirna Šolić Narratives of Resistance: Listening to Women Seeking Asylum in the United Kingdom ............................................................................... 27 Kate Smith Narrating Identity in Najat El Hachmi’s L’últim -
Page 1 What We Talk About When We
WHAT WE TALK ABOUT WHEN WE TALK ABOUT EUROPE / BELGRADE DEBATE ON EUROPE PAGE 1 BELGRADE DEBATE ON EUROPE / WHAT WE TALK ABOUT WHEN WE TALK ABOUT EUROPE BELGRADE DEBATE ON EUROPE WHAT WE TALK ABOUT WHEN WE TALK ABOUT EUROPE More than twenty years have passed since the signing of the Maastricht Treaty 1992, when twelve member states founded the European Union and took an important step towards the integration of Europe. But 1992 was also the year when the long and bloody war in Bosnia and Herzegovina started, the final blow to violently disintegrating Yugoslavia. Shortly before, with the end of the Soviet Union, the iron curtain had disappeared which had parted Germany and our whole continent. PAGE 2 WHAT WE TALK ABOUT WHEN WE TALK ABOUT EUROPE / BELGRADE DEBATE ON EUROPE New realities appeared on the horizon. The Balkans apart, everybody in East and West could all at once see in a peaceful, prosperous and democratically free Europe a real possibility. More than twenty years later, in 2014, earlier certainties and hopes have become questionable. Europe, threatened by economic crisis and xenophobic nationalism within and by new conflicts and wars at its borders, is hardly certain of its own identity and destiny. What is Europe, after all? A continent, a political union, a vast playground for bureaucrats? An exclusive club admitting only the rich and powerful? Or is it perhaps rather a position to take, a stance, mental attitude? Is there a chance for a Europe which could, united, at the same time preserve its multiplicity? Dominant concepts -
1 Transformations of the Public Intellectual
Notes 1 Transformations of the Public Intellectual 1. E.M. Forster (1972 [1946]) ‘The challenge of our time’ in E.M. Forster (ed.) Two Cheers for Democracy (London: Edward Arnold), p. 58. 2. See ‘Hey, Big Thinker’ http://www.nytimes.com/2014/04/27/fashion/ Thomas-Piketty-the-Economist-Behind-Capital-in-the-Twenty-First- Century-sensation.html?_r=3, date accessed 4 January 2015. 3. ‘A 42 ans, celui qui fut pendant trois ans outre-Atlantique l’un des plus jeunes profs du MIT de Cambridge, mais préfère son petit bureau blindé de livres de l’Ecole d’économie de Paris au faste des grandes chaires universitaire made in USA, se dit ‘ravi’. See http://www.liberation.fr/economie/2014/04/25/ piketty-superstar-aux-states_1004593, date accessed 4 January 2015. 4. Die Welt: ‘Franzosen werden selten zu Rockstars in Amerika. Schon gar nicht, wenn sie ein Wirtschaftsbuch schreiben. Aber der bislang unbe- kannte Pariser Ökonom Thomas Piketty hat es in Übersee zu schnellem Ruhm geschafft. Innerhalb weniger Tage ist er zum Gesprächsthema einer ganzen Nation geworden’. See http://www.welt.de/print/die_welt/finanzen/ article127204933/Darum-werden-die-Reichen-immer-reicher.html, date accessed 4 January 2015. 5. The publisher De Bezige Bij paid 125,000 euro to Editions du Seuil, which is exceptional for a book that has already been published. See http://www. nrc.nl/handelsblad/van/2014/mei/07/kapitaal-de-bezige-bij-wint-strijd-om- vertaling-p-1376326, date accessed 4 January 2015. 6. See De Groene Amsterdammer, Special 29 Mei, 2014, and ‘Het ongelijk van Piketty’, 31 mei 2014. -
Confronting the Past: Contemporary Eastern European Writers
Wyoming Council for the Humanities: Book Discussion Series Archives novel–evoking the spirit of Franz Kafka–Kis continues the Confronting the Past: tradition of ironic pathos that is so much a part of Central European literature. His masterful account of the final Contemporary Eastern months of one man's life before he is sent to a concentration camp is at once sidesplitting and European Writers heartbreaking, as well as an esthetic tour de force. (Note: This book series if currently retired) In The Unbearable Lightness of Being (1984), Franco- Czech novelist Milan Kundera raises the European "novel CONFRONTING THE PAST: CONTEMPORARY of ideas" to a new level of dreamlike lyricism and EASTERN EUROPEAN WRITERS 1 emotional intensity. Set first in communist-controlled Czechoslovakia, then in Switzerland, Kundera's story chronicles the adventures of a Czech surgeon forced to OVERVIEW 1 flee the Russian invasion of his country. It portrays a world FOR FURTHER READING 1 where lives are shaped by irrevocable choices and by GENERAL COMMENTARY ON THE SERIES 2 fortuitous events, where existence seems to lose it s CAFÉ EUROPA 4 substance, its “weight.” Hence, we feel "the unbearable CLOSELY WATCHED TRAINS 9 lightness of being," not only as a consequence of our THE WALL JUMPER 13 private acts, but also in the public sphere because the two THE UNBEARABLE LIGHTNESS OF BEING 17 are inextricably intertwined. THE ENGINEER OF HUMAN SOULS 20 HOURGLASS 24 During the period of the Berlin Wall, the divided city of DISTURBING THE PEACE 26 Berlin resembled an island in a sea of land. -
Engaged French Intellectuals and the Yugoslav Wars
Südosteuropa 61 (2013), H. 4, S. 498-521 PERCEPTIONS OF THE WARS IN YUGOSLAVIA Public Controversies NADÈGE RAGARU Missed Encounters: Engaged French Intellectuals and the Yugoslav Wars Abstract . In her contribution, Nadège Ragaru investigates what she calls a paradox: The wars in Yugoslavia provoked a wide array of citizen initiatives, petitions, and demonstrations . Yet, their impact on French diplomacy was limited . The French government remained opposed to the idea of military intervention until the 1995 elections . The author examines three aspects of this paradox: First, the encounters between Paris and Sarajevo resulted in missed opportunities . For the French intellectuals the conflict turned into an arena where several prominent figures tested their authority, attempted to bolster their legitimacy, and introduced the di visions that structure their competing intellectual fields. Second, while “local voices” were solicited by the media and inaugurated “the era of the witness” (Wieviorka), their selective use tended to obscure the conflict. Finally, the wars represented a critical moment for academics with a Yugoslav background . Many had not worked on Yugoslav issues before and witnessed powerlessly as former academic solidarities in France and Yugoslavia collapsed . This situa- tion in turn impeded a more adequate analysis of the Yugoslav wars. Nadège Ragaru is CNRS Researcher at Sciences Po (CERI), Paris . Few crises have spawned as many polyphonic narratives as the break-up of former Yugoslavia .1 Fewer still have provoked such a wide array of citizen ini- tiatives, petitions, and demonstrations. In the first half of the 1990s, the French public space was filled with a wealth of intellectuals, scholars, and artists who offered contrasting accounts of the dissolution of the Federation and the en - suing conflicts. -
Reeification NEWS from INDIANA UNIVERSITY’S RUSSIAN and EAST EUROPEAN INSTITUTE Maria Bucur, Director Brooke Swafford, Editor Vol
REEIfication NEWS FROM INDIANA UNIVERSITY’S RUSSIAN AND EAST EUROPEAN INSTITUTE Maria Bucur, Director Brooke Swafford, Editor Vol. 35, No. 1 February 2011 Baltic Independence Celebrations at IU by Zachary Kelly For BaFSA, the Baltic and Finnish Student Association, the fall semester was a busy time as its members brainstormed about future events and prepared for the annual Latvian Independence Day celebration. Latvia declared independence from the Russian Empire on November 18, 1918. Despite the fifty years of Soviet rule commencing in 1940, Latvians still recognize this date as the beginning of their official independence. BaFSA hosted the Latvian February 2011 Independence Day celebration on November 17, 2010, with generous support from the Russian Features and East European Institute and the Department Andrejs Pildegovics, Latvia’s of Central Eurasian Studies Baltic Independence Ambassador to the United States, The early celebration date was chosen Celebrations at IU 1 participated in a BaFSA Latvian intentionally to accommodate a special “virtual” Independence Day celebration guest and speaker, Andrejs Pildegovics, the Slavenka Drakulic in via Skype on November 17. Bloomington 2 Latvian Ambassador to the United States. He joined the festivities via Skype and spoke to those in attendance about Latvia’s Roy J. Gardner 3 progress during the two decades after the collapse of the Soviet Union. Another Public Health Intiatives at special guest was Indiana University student and IU Women’s Basketball REEI 4 player, Kristiana Stauere. In the final stage of the celebration, the Latvian Choir serenaded attendants with three Latvian classics and the Latvian National Prof McCormick Discusses the New Joint Degree Program 5 Anthem.