Partner Info

Back Issues

Partner Journals


Latest Articles


16.10.2008
Attila Ilhan

Being recognized abroad

In an article published in 1966, the Turkish poet and journalist Attila Ilhan argued that Turkish literature was far from having gained real recognition abroad. Is the situation substantially different now, despite the Frankfurt accolade? [ more ]

16.10.2008
Selahattin Batu

Understanding the West

16.10.2008
Ahmet Hamdi Tanpinar

The city

15.10.2008
György Konrád

Urban asphalt gave flower to utopia


New Issues


Eurozine Review


07.10.2008
Eurozine Review

A savage joke

"Index" follows counter terrorism from the courtroom to the community; "Osteuropa" anticipates a renaissance of Jewish life in eastern Europe; "The Hungarian Quarterly" has it out with eastern European savages; "Dilema veche" goes undercover in Italy; "Host" asks who flies the flag of commitment; "Kulturos barai" deplores toothless journalism; "Akadeemia" celebrates academia; "Magyar Lettre Internationale" debates '68 East and West; and "Fronesis" reads Marx beyond Marxism.

16.09.2008
Eurozine Review

Graphic and explicit

02.09.2008
Eurozine Review

The enzyme of freedom

12.08.2008
Eurozine Review

Why should I fill my pack with stones?

29.07.2008
Eurozine Review

Ready... steady... pray!


http://www.blaetter.de/usa2008.php
http://mitpress.mit.edu/0262025248
http://xwords.fr
http://www.istanbulseminars.org
http://www.eurozine.com/about/who-we-are/contact.html
http://www.ceeol.com/
http://www.atlas-der-globalisierung.de

My Eurozine


If you want to be kept up to date, you can subscribe to Eurozine's rss-newsfeed or our Newsletter.

Sodobnost Self-description

Sodobnost was founded in 1933 after the collapse of an earlier magazine, Ljubljanski Zvon, and has now been published since 1933 (it was not published for three years during World War II). Sodobnost has always been regarded as the central and most important Slovenian literary magazine, open to writers and poets of all aesthetic persuasions. It has launched practically all Slovenian literary generations, and there is no writer or critic of note in Slovenia whose work has not, at one time or another, appeared in Sodobnost.

In the 1980s, its importance declined somewhat with the rise of the dissident journal Nova revija. However, with Nova revija having lost the context for its politically charged contents, and with the old editorial board of Sodobnost finally stepping aside in favour of a younger, more cosmopolitan crew, Sodobnost quickly regained the lost ground and is now a truly contemporary literary journal, publishing poetry, prose, and essays by Slovenian and foreign authors; new Slovenian drama (the only magazine publishing plays); lengthy critical reviews of new books (by Slovenian and translated authors); polemical essays with a social, political, or philosophical angle; round-table discussions about matters of national, cultural, and literary interest; interviews with writers, critics, theatre directors, architects, etc; as well as longer blocks of translated poetry and prose from other languages on an exchange basis. It is open to younger authors, who are increasingly beginning to see it as "their" literary journal. Thus the continuing future of the longest surviving magazine in Slovenia (if not in the whole of central Europe) remains assured.

powered by publick.net