The Making of Central and Eastern Europe
Author : Francis Dvornik
Publisher :
Page : 400 pages
File Size : 23,95 MB
Release : 1974
Category : History
ISBN :
Author : Francis Dvornik
Publisher :
Page : 400 pages
File Size : 23,95 MB
Release : 1974
Category : History
ISBN :
Author : Marci Shore
Publisher : Yale University Press
Page : 959 pages
File Size : 36,22 MB
Release : 2006-01-01
Category : Political Science
ISBN : 0300128622
""In the elegant capital city of Warsaw, the editor Mieczyslaw Grydzewski would come with his two dachshunds to a cafe called Ziemianska."" Thus begins the history of a generation of Polish literati born at the ""fin de siecle,"" They sat in Cafe Ziemianska and believed that the world moved on what they said there. ""Caviar and Ashes"" tells the story of the young avant-gardists of the early 1920s who became the radical Marxists of the late 1920s. They made the choice for Marxism before Stalinism, before socialist realism, before Marxism meant the imposition of Soviet communism in Poland. It ended tragically. Marci Shore begins with this generation's coming of age after the First World War and narrates a half-century-long journey through futurist manifestos and proletarian poetry, Stalinist terror and Nazi genocide, a journey from the literary cafes to the cells of prisons and the corridors of power. Using newly available archival materials from Poland and Russia, as well as from Ukraine and Israel, Shore explores what it meant to live Marxism as a European, an East European, and a Jewish intellectual in the twentieth century.
Author : Henryk Paszkiewicz
Publisher :
Page : 544 pages
File Size : 18,84 MB
Release : 1983
Category : History
ISBN :
This is the English translation of the classic study on the rise of the power of Moscow by Henryk Paszkiewicz.
Author : Alexander Victor Prusin
Publisher : University of Alabama Press
Page : 198 pages
File Size : 16,79 MB
Release : 2016-12-13
Category : History
ISBN : 0817358889
Examines the causes of the rise of xenophobic nationalism and antisemitic genocide in the Austro-Hungarian province of Galicia between 1914 and 1920.
Author : Larry Wolff
Publisher : Stanford University Press
Page : 502 pages
File Size : 35,77 MB
Release : 2012-01-09
Category : History
ISBN : 0804774293
Galicia was created at the first partition of Poland in 1772 and disappeared in 1918. Yet, in slightly over a century, the idea of Galicia came to have meaning for both the peoples who lived there and the Habsburg government that ruled it. Indeed, its memory continues to exercise a powerful fascination for those who live in its former territories and for the descendants of those who emigrated out of Galicia. The idea of Galicia was largely produced by the cultures of two cities, Lviv and Cracow. Making use of travelers' accounts, newspaper reports, and literary works, Wolff engages such figures as Emperor Joseph II, Metternich, Leopold von Sacher-Masoch, Ivan Franko, Stanisław Wyspiański, Tadeusz "Boy" Żeleński, Isaac Babel, Martin Buber, and Bruno Schulz. He shows the exceptional importance of provincial space as a site for the evolution of cultural meanings and identities, and analyzes the province as the framework for non-national and multi-national understandings of empire in European history.
Author : Elżbieta Chrzanowska-Kluczewska
Publisher : Text ¿ Meaning ¿ Context: Cracow Studies in English Language, Literature and Culture
Page : 0 pages
File Size : 48,39 MB
Release : 2017
Category : Cognitive grammar
ISBN : 9783631660867
Language, Literature, Works of Art: The Texts of Our Experience - Philosophy, Language and the Arts - Literature, Music and the Visual Arts - The Art of Translation, Translation among the Arts - Linguistics and Semiotics of Creativity
Author : Laura Mulvey
Publisher : Reaktion Books
Page : 220 pages
File Size : 15,79 MB
Release : 2006-03
Category : Performing Arts
ISBN : 9781861892638
A fascinating exploration of the role new media technologies play in our experience of film.
Author : Richard Buckminster Fuller
Publisher : Springer Science & Business Media
Page : 334 pages
File Size : 47,96 MB
Release : 2001
Category : Architects
ISBN : 9783907044940
This book complements the volume R. Buckminster Fuller, Your Private Sky: Design Art Science and gives an authentic insight into the development of Fuller's architectonic, technical and anthropological concepts. This poet of technology was a poet as engineer, a thinker as designer, an artist as researcher who left an immense testament of writings - including texts of visionary importance, great consistency, penetrating linguistic force and not least of urgent topicality. The book documents various aspects of his widely ramified publications. Fuller spoke to the whole world, indeed to Spaceship Earth, the metaphor that he coined in 1950. He did this as one of the greatest and incomparably original individuals of our time in a genuinely American sense. Some of the texts are published here for the first time, such as his first programmatic manuscript Lightful Houses (1928), an informative lecture text on Dymaxion House (1929), his Letter to Einstein (1944) and the convolute Noah's ArkII (1951) as a commented facsimile. Photographs from Fuller's estate complement the texts.
Author : Stephen Wright
Publisher :
Page : 68 pages
File Size : 38,43 MB
Release : 2013
Category :
ISBN : 9789490757144
Turning away from pursuing art's aesthetic function, many practitioners are redifining their engagement with art, less in terms of authorship than as users of artistic competence, insisting that art foster more robust use values and gain more bite in the real. No genuine self-understanding of the relatonal and dialectical category of usership will be possible until the existent conceptual lexicon is retooled.
Author : Richard Buckminster Fuller
Publisher : Birkhäuser
Page : 384 pages
File Size : 18,38 MB
Release : 2019-08-19
Category : Architecture
ISBN : 3035617767
New edition of Buckminster Fuller’s first work published in 1938, which was promoted by Albert Einstein. In 43 chapters the constructor, visionary, inventor, designer, creator of language, and spectacular performer rolls out the art of independent thought. Fuller lays out an enormous horizon and Nine Chains to the Moon is equivalent to a navigation across the world we live in: "What Is a House?", "Death and Life", "Longing Crosses the Sea", "Dollarability", "We Call it Earth", "Stomach Rhythms", "Ephemeralization"—from the microscopic to the automobile, to the house, to urbanity, to the image of the cosmos in constant movement. The title, said Fuller, is meant to stimulate open thinking: the 1938 world population, one person on the shoulders of another, will reach from the earth to the moon nine times!