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22.07.2008
Olle Sahlström

Migration: a lever for union renewal?

The trade union is at a crossroad. Immigrant workers must be included in the unions. Either one chooses to try classic methods of organization, or entirely new directions which risk a widening of the gap between the white, male worker aristocracy and the poor, exploited migrant worker. [ more ]

18.07.2008
Devrim Mavi, Pernilla Ouis, Anne Sofie Roald, Per Wirtén

They removed the veil

17.07.2008
Hauke Ritz

The global chess board

15.07.2008
Wolfgang Kraushaar

Hannah Arendt and the student movement

15.07.2008
Hannah Arendt, Hans-Jürgen Benedict

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Eurozine Review


08.07.2008
Eurozine Review

Plan B or not to be

"Critique & Humanism" takes a neighbourly view on Turkey; "dérive" doesn't play ball; "Reset" picks up the pieces after Veltroni's defeat; "Multitudes" joins the carnival; "The Hungarian Quarterly" finds the country in a gloomy mood; "Mittelweg 36" asks what's in a friendship; "Revista Crítica" reads epistemologies of the South; "Springerin" sees the provincial in the universal; "Kulturos barai" watches patriarchs fall; and "Cogito" casts a tragic hero for our times.

24.06.2008
Eurozine Review

We, the President

03.06.2008
Eurozine Review

Olympic indifference

20.05.2008
Eurozine Review

Misunderstanding '68

29.04.2008
Eurozine Review

The centre is everywhere


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Authors

Stephan Wackwitz

(b.1952 in Stuttgart, Germany) has worked for the Goethe-Institut in Frankfurt, New Delhi, Tokyo, and Munich, Cracow, and is currently the director of the institute in Bratislava. His novel Neue Menschen. Bildungsroman was published in 2005.



Eurozine Articles


Stephan Wackwitz

In the national museum tradition invents itself

Cracow's monumental painting

The Polish national museum of nineteenth-century art does not represent a real past but the ideas of a group of conservatives from the last century. For contemporary Poland, however, it has become the authentic image of the past. [more]

14.08.2006



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