Todorova | Scaling the Balkans | Buch | 978-90-04-35889-8 | sack.de

Buch, Englisch, Band 24, 674 Seiten, Format (B × H): 160 mm x 236 mm, Gewicht: 1089 g

Reihe: Balkan Studies Library

Todorova

Scaling the Balkans

Essays on Eastern European Entanglements
Erscheinungsjahr 2018
ISBN: 978-90-04-35889-8
Verlag: Brill

Essays on Eastern European Entanglements

Buch, Englisch, Band 24, 674 Seiten, Format (B × H): 160 mm x 236 mm, Gewicht: 1089 g

Reihe: Balkan Studies Library

ISBN: 978-90-04-35889-8
Verlag: Brill


Scaling the Balkans puts in conversation several fields that have been traditionally treated as discrete: Balkan studies, Ottoman studies, East European studies, and Habsburg and Russian studies. By looking at the complex interrelationship between countries and regions, demonstrating how different perspectives and different methodological approaches inflect interpretations and conclusions, it insists on the heuristic value of scales. The volume is a collection of published and unpublished essays, dealing with issues of modernism, backwardness, historical legacy, balkanism, post-colonialism and orientalism, nationalism, identity and alterity, society-and nation-building, historical demography and social structure, socialism and communism in memory, and historiography.

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Autoren/Hrsg.


Weitere Infos & Material


List of Illustrations, Tables, Figures and Maps

Introduction

Part 1: Concepts

Section 1: Modernism, Backwardness and Legacy

1 The Trap of Backwardness: Modernity, Temporality and the Study of Eastern European Nationalism

2 Modernism

3 Historical Legacies between Europe and the Near East

Section 2: Balkanism, Postcolonialism and Orientalism

4 Balkan

5 Balkanism and Postcolonialism or On the Beauty of the Airplane View

6 The Balkans: from Discovery to Invention

7 The Balkans: from Invention to Intervention

8 Does Russian Orientalism Have a Russian Soul? A Contribution to the Debate between Nathaniel Knight and Adeeb Khalid

Section 3: Nationalism, Identity and Alterity

9 Is There Weak Nationalism and Is It a Useful Category?

10 Is “the Other” a Useful Cross-cultural Concept? Some Thoughts on Its Implementation to the Balkan Region

11 Isn’t Central Europe Dead? Comments on Iver Neumann’s “Forgetting the Central Europe of the 1980s”

12 What Is or Is There a Balkan Culture, and Do or Should the Balkans Have a Regional Identity?

Part 2: Structures, Processes and Events

Section 1: Demography and Social Structure

13 European Population History: the Balkans

14 Situating the Family of Ottoman Bulgaria within the European Pattern

15 On the Epistemological Value of Family Models: the Balkans within the European Pattern

16 Historical Tradition and Transformation in Bulgaria: Women’s Issues, Feminist Issues

Section 2: Nation- and Society-Building

17 The Course and Discourses of Bulgarian Nationalism

18 Language as a Cultural Unifier in a Multilingual Setting: the Bulgarian Case during the Nineteenth Century

19 Identity (Trans)formation among Bulgarian Muslims

20 Midhat Pasha and the Bulgarians

21 Improbable Maverick or Typical Conformist? Seven Thoughts on the New Bulgaria

Section 3: Historiography and Memory

22 East European Studies in the US: Thematic and Methodological Problems

23 The Ottoman Menace in Post-Habsburg Historiography

24 Conversion to Islam as a Trope in Bulgarian Historiography, Fiction and Film

25 The Balkan Wars in Memory: the Carnegie Report and Trotsky’s War Correspondence

Section 4: Socialism and Communism in Memory

26 Shared or Contested Heritage? Commemorating Socialism and Communism in Europe

27 1917 in the Balkans: Divergent “Horizons of Expectation”

28 Was there Civil Society and a Public Sphere under Socialism? The Debates around Vasil Levski’s Alleged Reburial in Bulgaria

29 Blowing Up the Past: the Mausoleum of Georgi Dimitrov as Lieu de Mémoire

30 Remembering Communism: Similar Trajectories, Different Memories

Index


Maria Todorova, PhD (1977) is the Gutgsell Professor of History and CAS Professor at the University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign. She is the author of numerous monographs, articles and edited volumes, including Imagining the Balkans (1997, 2009, translated in 14 languages).



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