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05.09.2008
Geert Lovink

The society of the query and the Googlization of our lives

A tribute to Joseph Weizenbaum

"There is only one way to turn signals into information, through interpretation", wrote the computer critic Joseph Weizenbaum. As Google's hegemony over online content increases, argues Geert Lovink, we should stop searching and start questioning. [ more ]

03.09.2008
Jirí Dienstbier, Jirí Grusa, Lionel Jospin, Adam Michnik, Oskar Negt, Friedrich Schorlemmer

From '68 to '89

02.09.2008
Eurozine Review

The enzyme of freedom

02.09.2008
Alexander Daniel

1968 in Moscow


New Issues


26.08.2008

Osteuropa | 7/2008

Das Enzym der Freiheit. 1968 und das halbierte Bewusstsein

Eurozine Review


02.09.2008
Eurozine Review

The enzyme of freedom

"Transit" advocates a concerted EU approach to Russia; on '68, "Osteuropa" mends a split consciousness while "Mittelweg 36" regrets nothing; "Mute" critiques "Green capitalism"; "Esprit" observes democracy's transformations; "Wespennest" awaits something better; "Kulturos barai" defends Fluxus; "Host" hits the road; "Le Monde diplomatique" (Oslo) follows the comic strip of empire; "Dialogi" warns against experts; "Reset" seeks perspectives for Italy's Democrats.

12.08.2008
Eurozine Review

Why should I fill my pack with stones?

29.07.2008
Eurozine Review

Ready... steady... pray!

08.07.2008
Eurozine Review

Plan B or not to be

24.06.2008
Eurozine Review

We, the President


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Magyar Lettre Internationale Articles

Articles published in Eurozine


Brigitte Döbert

Sarajevo retro, or The Orient in the Occident

Bosnian Muslims, Bosniaks, or "Turks" are, despite their European origins, considered "foreign": how else can their demonization during the last war be explained? [Hungarian version added] [more]

04.06.2008


Karl Schlögel

Archipelago Europe

Instead of two homogeneous European regions -- "the East" and "the West" -- there are now fragments, enclaves, and islands. From Baden-Baden to Bucharest, Majorca to Moscow, Karl Schlögel experiences Europe as a series of spaces both distinct and connected. [Hungarian version added] [more]

05.05.2008


Jean Meyer

Memories and histories: The new Spanish Civil War

The pact of silence that has existed in Spain over the Civil War and Franco era is becoming increasingly difficult to maintain. A boom in publications on the subject seems to bear out Manuel Azańa's comment that "burying the dead is a Spanish national pastime". [Hungarian version added] [more]

22.10.2007


Erich Klein

The patriarch of Muscovite conceptualism

On the death of Russian artist Dimitri Prigov

The Russian artist and writer Dimitri Prigov is dead. Erich Klein, his friend and German translator, remembers one of the most important poets of the late and post-Soviet era. [Hungarian version added] [more]

18.07.2007


Volker Hage

Buried feelings

German authors' handling of the Allied bombing in World War II

W.G. Sebald claimed that the Allied bombing was hushed up in postwar German literature. Not entirely true, responds Volker Hage: there are a number of novels outside the canon in which the experience of the bombing comes to light. [Hungarian version added] [more]

08.10.2007


Pierre Nora

Reasons for the current upsurge in memory

Over the past quarter century, social structures have undergone a sea change in their traditional relationship to the past. Pierre Nora examines the roots and causes of "memorialism". [Hungarian and Lithuanian versions added] [more]

08.10.2007


János Háy

The kid

"The kids of the divorced repeat the divorce, the kids of the quarrelsome repeat the quarrels, so that everything can go on in the same unbearable fashion that people have become accustomed to for thousands of years..." In blackly comic vein, Hungarian playwright and poet János Háy narrates a web of dysfunctional loves and lives in town and country. [more]

03.08.2007


Zsófia Bán

A box of photos

(Captions on the back)

A man looks at photographs of his youth in pre-war Budapest. Above all he remembers his love, the seductive Jolika. Yet memory is tainted by sorrow as it becomes clear that this is a story of loss and displacement. [more]

19.07.2007


Andrzej Tichy

The scream of geometry

(modified excerpts)

"How can these cities, villages, and their people exist? How can they stand there selling tomatoes and speaking their language and drying their laundry without considering the infinite number of other places where someone else is standing, selling tomatoes or potatoes and speaking their language and drying laundry?" [Hungarian version added] [more]

21.02.2007


Bernard Magnier

The presence of African literature

The evolution of literary criticism, publishing, and readership

Africa’s growing role in western European culture is reflected in the increasing interest in its literature. Soon Kourouma will be shelved between Kafka and Kundera. [Hungarian version added] [more]

20.06.2007


András Forgách

Zehuze

A Hungarian-Israeli mother addresses her daughter in Europe in a letter she never sends. In a fictional monologue, András Forgách explores the private suffering and political ambivalence of a life in postwar Israel. One of Hungary's most interesting authors for the first time in English translation. [more]

18.05.2007


Juan Villoro

Stalemate in Mexico

On a divided country and its discontented Left

In December 2006, Felipe Calderón was sworn in as Mexico's new conservative president. But with accusations of electoral fraud hanging over him, Calderón is the least-supported president in Mexico's history. [Hungarian version added] [more]

28.03.2007


Boris Cizej

Letter from Ljubljana

The editor of the Slovenian edition of "Le Monde diplomatique" finds that no news is not necessarily good news in a country afflicted by "lethargic hedonism". [Hungarian version added] [more]

28.03.2007


Endre Kukorelly

Ruin: A history of commonism

An excerpt

A bitter meditation on the legacy of the Soviet regime and the impossibility of adequately remembering the scale of its brutality. [more]

25.10.2006


Gábor Németh

1956

An excerpt

On 23 October 1956, the author was almost shot twice... Before he'd even been born. [more]

25.10.2006


Ingeborg Kongslien

Migrant or multicultural literature in the Nordic countries

Over the last three decades, authors with migrant backgrounds have been challenging and expanding the Nordic national literary canons. A review of "migrant literature" in Sweden, Denmark, and Norway. [more]

03.08.2006


Caroline Moorehead

Necessary lies

Fabricated identities have become a valuable commodity for asylum seekers for whom credibility is the bottom line. Meanwhile, the media adds to the climate of disinformation. [more]

26.07.2006


Peter Loizos

London is not Paris

The British model: Practical, durable, but by far not ideal

The British multicultural model could lead French republicanism out of its impasse, demonstrated by the rioting in November 2005. [more]

26.07.2006


Elmar Holenstein

The navel of the world

"What does he know of Europe who only Europe knows?" said Rudyard Kipling. A plea for looking beyond the borders of fatherland and mother tongue. [more]

26.07.2006


Stig Saeterbakken

My heart belongs to Europe. Therefore it is broken

Does literature help maintain individual and collective identity, or does it inspire us to discredit it? [more]

08.11.2006


Erika Csontos, György Spiró

A witness of the first century

An interview with György Spiró

The author of Captivity, a reconstruction of the period from around the death of Christ until the Jewish War, on why he needed 800 pages to finish his story; why he imagined Jesus as a chubby, fortyish guy; and why people can no longer read the Iliad. [more]

30.01.2006


Razvan Paraianu

The history textbooks controversy in Romania

Five years on

The Romanian history textbooks that came out in 1999 reflecting EU values of cultural diversity earned fierce criticism from establishment historians. Why was it not possible at the time to discuss the issue with professional objectivity? [more]

01.12.2005


Marius Ivaskevicius

My Scandinavia (VII)

Lithuanian novelist and playwright Marius Ivaskevicius is highly rated in the Baltic States, Poland, and Hungary for his humorous observations of contemporary life. Now Eurozine publishes, in English translation, his seven-part Scandinavian travelogue. In part VI, Ivaskevicius became the northernmost European. This week, fighting the urge to push even further north, he turns back, and, trying to discern the essence of Scandinavia, walks headfirst into a blizzard. His journey, and our story, ends here. [more]

14.11.2005


Christoph Conrad

"Culture" instead of "Society"?

The contemporary debate in historiography

In the 1980s, if historians wanted to read about the history of emotions, for example, they had to go to a French theologian; today, the topic is treated from within the discipline. Evaluating the "cultural turn" in historiography. [more]

10.11.2005


Marius Ivaskevicius

My Scandinavia (VI)

Lithuanian novelist and playwright Marius Ivaskevicius is highly rated in the Baltic States, Poland, and Hungary for his humorous observations of contemporary life. Now Eurozine publishes, in English translation, his seven-part Scandinavian travelogue. In part V, Ivaskevicius entered Christmas card heaven in northern Norway. But the journey doesn't end there. This week, facing off stiff competition, he finally becomes the northernmost European. [more]

07.11.2005


Marius Ivaskevicius

My Scandinavia (V)

Lithuanian novelist and playwright Marius Ivaskevicius is highly rated in the Baltic States, Poland, and Hungary for his humorous observations of contemporary life. Now Eurozine publishes, in English translation, his seven-part Scandinavian travelogue. In part IV, Ivaskevicius reached the edge of the Arctic Circle. Now he presses on to Lake Inar and enters Christmas card heaven. Then it's west into Norway to meet the Sami people -- if only someone would point them out to him... [more]

31.10.2005


Marius Ivaskevicius

My Scandinavia (IV)

Lithuanian novelist and playwright Marius Ivaskevicius is highly rated in the Baltic States, Poland, and Hungary for his humorous observations of contemporary life. Now Eurozine publishes, in English translation, his seven-part Scandinavian travelogue. In part four he journeys to the north of Finland, stopping off at the middle of nowhere before pressing on to the edge of the Arctic Circle. [more]

24.10.2005


Karl Schlögel

Voyage to Brno

An archeology of the inter-war modern

Central eastern European modernism in the 1930s was an aesthetic declaration of war on the style of the defeated empires. With the resurgence of "civil Europe" after 1989, the White Modern has renewed significance. [more]

18.10.2005


Marius Ivaskevicius

My Scandinavia (III)

Lithuanian novelist and playwright Marius Ivaskevicius is highly rated in the Baltic States, Poland, and Hungary for his humorous observations of contemporary life. Now Eurozine publishes, in English translation, his seven-part Scandinavian travelogue. Here, he looks to Finland, like Lithuania a nation with a history of embattled independence. Over a round of drinks he discovers that's not all the Lithuanians and the Finns have in common. [more]

17.10.2005


Marius Ivaskevicius

My Scandinavia (II)

Lithuanian novelist and playwright Marius Ivaskevicius is highly popular in the Baltic States, Poland, and Hungary for his humorous observations of contemporary life. Now Eurozine publishes, in English translation, his seven-part Scandinavian travelogue. Here, he remembers his first trip to Sweden, where he learned the meaning of an honest day's work and fell in love with a blonde in an Opel. And how different Sweden seemed when he returned ten years later as a writer. [more]

10.10.2005


Marius Ivaskevicius

My Scandinavia (I)

Lithuanian novelist and playwright Marius Ivaskevicius is highly rated in the Baltic States, Poland, and Hungary for his humorous observations of contemporary life. Now Eurozine publishes, in English translation, his seven-part Scandinavian travelogue. [more]

03.10.2005


Pal Bekes

The Age of Discovery

The Oceans

[more]

15.02.2000


Pal Bekes

The Age of Discovery

America

.. [more]

15.02.2000


Peter Lengyel

Budapest in one day

Kurzer Leitfaden für Budapest

... [more]

15.02.2000


Peter Lengyel

Curriculum vitae

.. [more]

15.02.2000


Pal Bekes

The Fort Madison Rodeo

.. [more]

14.02.2000


Hanna Schissler

Annäherungen an Budapest

Briefe an Freunde und Freundinnen in Deutschland und den USA

For a German historian posted at the Central European University in Budapest, public transport announcements are just one obstacle in getting to know Hungarian culture. [more]

01.08.2005


Laszlo Vegel

Ein heimatloser Lokalpatriot

Betrachtungen über Novi Sad und Serbien vor und nach den Balkan Kriegen. [more]

29.11.2002


Pál Zavada

Milota tells of the Kuhajda Family and of the Poppies

Pál Záveda tells a story of poppy seeds, beauty, and lost love. [more]

08.10.2002


Pál Zavada

Discours de Milota au Sujet des Transports

Extracts from the novel Milota by Pál Zavada. [more]

08.10.2002



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