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09.05.2008
Jonathan Barnes, Myles Fredric Burnyeat, Raymond Geuss, Barry Stroud

Modes of philosophizing

A round table debate

Should philosophy have something to say to non-philosophers? Should it be pursued only by those trained in philosophy? And should analytic philosophy reject continental philosophy or recognize it as another "mode of philosophizing"? [ more ]

08.05.2008
Rasa Balockaite

Lithuania in Europe, Europe in Lithuania

07.05.2008
Chris Reynolds

May '68: a contested history

06.05.2008
Francesc Xavier Rubert de Ventós, Daniel Gamper, Mercč Rius

"If I don't say what I think, what's the point of being mad?"

05.05.2008
Karl Schlögel

Archipelago Europe


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09.05.2008

Esprit | 5/2008

Autour de 1968 : Années utopiques, années parasites ? [Around 1968: Years of utopia or years of freeloading?]
06.05.2008

Ord&Bild | 2/2008

06.05.2008

Mittelweg 36 | 2/2008

17. Jahrgang April / Mai 2008

Eurozine Review


29.04.2008
Eurozine Review

The centre is everywhere

"Arche" looks warily at the Belarusian thaw; "Magyar Lettre" gets to the heart of the central European city; "Kulturos barai" criticizes the culture of groceries; "Fronesis" takes counsel on the "unhappy marriage" between feminism and the Left; "A Prior" looks at monuments that won't melt into air; "Revista Crítica" sees the political potential of bio-art; "Critique & Humanism" analyzes neophilia and neophobia; "Dialogi" lashes out at the Slovenian press; and "Glänta" is missing links.

15.04.2008
Eurozine Review

A mother since birth?

01.04.2008
Eurozine Review

Free minds before free speech

11.03.2008
Eurozine Review

Hannah Arendt on '68

19.02.2008
Eurozine Review

An acronym for the homeless


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Headlines
Jonathan Barnes, Myles Fredric Burnyeat, Raymond Geuss, Barry Stroud

Modes of philosophizing

A round table debate

philosophy Should philosophy have something to say to non-philosophers? Should it be pursued only by those trained in philosophy? And should analytic philosophy reject continental philosophy or recognize it as another "mode of philosophizing"? [ more ]

09.05.2008
Chris Reynolds

May '68: a contested history

1968 Despite the tendency of decennial commemorations to cement the "official version" of May '68, important questions remain unanswered. Chris Reynolds points out some blind spots in the increasingly stereotyped interpretation of the events in France forty years ago. [ more ]

07.05.2008
Francesc Xavier Rubert de Ventós, Daniel Gamper, Mercč Rius

"If I don't say what I think, what's the point of being mad?"

A conversation with Catalan philosopher Xavier Rubert de Ventós

philosophy "If my philosophy has been of any use to me, it's been to situate my monstrous condition within an order of general discourse." The Catalan philosopher and former MEP explains why he finds reactionaries more interesting than liberals and what he means by the "non-Fichtean ego". [ more ]

06.05.2008
Magnus Wennerhag

The politics of the global movement

global justice In an extract from his new book "Social Movement", Swedish sociologist Magnus Wennerhag argues that the global justice movement differs from the '68 protests in being more political and aimed at international institutions and a globalized democracy. [ more ]

02.05.2008
 

A look into the latest issues

Eurozine Review

The centre is everywhere

Journals digest "Arche" looks warily at the Belarusian thaw; "Magyar Lettre" gets to the heart of the central European city; "Kulturos barai" criticizes the culture of groceries; "Fronesis" takes counsel on the "unhappy marriage" between feminism and the Left; "A Prior" looks at monuments that won't melt into air; "Revista Crítica" sees the political potential of bio-art; "Critique & Humanism" analyzes neophilia and neophobia; "Dialogi" lashes out at the Slovenian press; and "Glänta" is missing links. [ more ]

29.04.2008
 
Nikoleta Popkostadinova

No maths and no water in Stolipinovo

The jobs boom in Bulgaria has left the Roma behind

poverty Roma in southeastern Europe are caught in the vicious cycle of discrimination and exclusion. While there is general agreement that socio-economic integration of Roma is desirable, neither the EU commission nor national governments appear willing to implement the necessary strategies. [ more ]

22.04.2008
Eurozine News Item

Lithuanian intellectual Bronys Savukynas dies at 78

Obituary Bronys Savukynas, renowned Lithuanian linguist, translator, and editor-in-chief of "Kulturos barai", died on Saturday 20 April in Vilnius. He was 78. Savukynas's contribution to Lithuanian intellectual culture was considerable. [ more ]

22.04.2008
Simon Garnett

Citizen Victim

The migrant youth, the RAF terrorist, and the German feuilletons

violence The German media's reaction to a recent spate of migrant youth violence bore striking similarities to last year's controversy over the release of Red Army Faction prisoners. In both cases, an ostensibly apolitical identification with the "victim" was nothing of the sort. [ more ]

18.04.2008
Skaidra Trilupaityte

Global museums in the twenty-first century

The Guggenheim foundation and the rhetoric of cultural planning in Vilnius

global culture The fact that a Guggenheim museum is being planned for Vilnius is indicative of the conviction that "de-provincialization" can only be achieved by taking part in global projects. Meanwhile, the cultural demands of the local population go unheeded. Vilnius is not Bilbao! [ more ]

17.04.2008
 

Literature

Margriet de Moor, Marek Seckar

"Water is more dangerous than the rise of Islam..."

Interview with Dutch writer Margriet de Moor

Literature and "real life" Although often using female heroines in her novels, Margriet de Moor finds pigeonholing literature into male and female categories is a pointless exercise. "The social issue of women suffering under a male dominance – no, I don't find it terribly interesting." [ more ]

24.04.2008

Literary criticism Read Literary perspectives, Eurozine's series of essays providing an overview of diverse literary landscapes in Europe. [ more ]

 
Jürgen Habermas

The dialectic of secularization

Religion and politics The opposition between "multiculturalism" and "Enlightenment fundamentalism" is misconceived, argues Jürgen Habermas. "The universalist claim of the political Enlightenment does not contradict the particularist sensibilities of a correctly understood multiculturalism." [ more ]

15.04.2008

Read also Is religion a public or a private matter? Can there be such a thing as a European Islam? Eurozine's Focal Point Post-secular Europe? [ more ]

 
Ieva Lesinska, Christopher Ricks

A lesson in Dylan appreciation

Interview When Christopher Ricks, author of critical works on Milton, Keats, and Eliot, turned his attention to Bob Dylan, critics grumbled that he could talk one into believing that even a phone book is poetry. Now that Dylan has won the Pulitzer Prize, they may have to reconsider. [ more ]

11.04.2008
Dietmar Dath

Captain America died last year

Kulturkritik Whoever doesn't read comics won't have gathered that the long-serving American superhero met his end last year. But who cares? And isn't that the problem? What are fans of US popular culture throughout the rest of the world to make of this new introspection? [ more ]

15.04.2008
Gábor Miklósi

Schengen blues

Borders Hungary's entry into the Schengen Zone in December 2007, along with eight other countries, brought a further relaxation of historical borders. While many communities have benefited, the process has not been without its absurdities, writes Gábor Miklósi. [ more ]

09.04.2008

Read also Living in visa territory by Nelly Bekus. [ more ]

Sven-Eric Liedman

The rebirth of religion and enchanting materialism

"Soft" Atheism While Europe is the exception in the global de-secularization of politics, theoretical interest in theological issues has been rising. Sven-Eric Liedman places "soft naturalism" against militant atheism and makes a plea for a "matérialisme enchanté". [ more ]

01.04.2008
Stephen H. Jones

The deep slumber of decided opinions

Rowan Williams and the Sharia controversy

Islam in Europe When Rowan Williams, the Archbishop of Canterbury and head of the Anglican Church, suggested that the British public consider "some accommodation" to Islamic law, the response was one of outrage. Yet in most cases his words were wildly misinterpreted, writes Stephen Jones. [ more ]

25.03.2008
Martin Hala

From "big character posters" to blogs

Facets of independent self-expression in China

China Despite predictions to the contrary, the Internet has not brought about abrupt political change in China and is not likely to do so anytime soon. Its significance and implications for Chinese society lie elsewhere, writes Martin Hala. [German version added] [ more ]

28.03.2008
 

BEHIND THE HEADLINES 1

A journey without maps

Zimbabwe Despite electoral defeat, Robert Mugabe is refusing to relinquish control of Zimbabwe. Poet, novelist, and journalist Chenjerai Hove has been one of the many opponents to fall foul of the Mugabe regime. Here he recalls two incidents typical of the censorship that forced him into internal exile; and how, in exile outside his home country, he discovered new perspectives. [ more ]

Read also: Augusta Conchiglia, Mugabe's iron hand (de); and Doris Lessing, Robert Mugabe and the Zimbabwean tragedy (de).

 

Behind the headlines 2

Cartoon controversy redux

free speech The Danish cartoon controversy has flared up again after police foiled a murder attempt on one of the cartoonists. This prompted Danish and international newspapers to republish the offending image, arguing that free speech is a fundamental human right and a central tenet of democracy. Yet there are strong divergences among liberals about what the right to free speech entails, as reactions to the initial controversy in 2006 revealed. Read on for Eurozine's take on the debate the last time around. [ more ]

 

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Harald Weilnböck

"The trauma must remain inaccessible to memory"

Part III

serial In the final part of Harald Weilnböck's essay on poststructuralist borrowing of the concept of psycho-trauma, the author draws some troubling conclusions from Dr Goodheart's excursus into poststructuralist trauma theory. Could an interest in ensuring that "the trauma remains inaccessible to memory" be affiliated to institutional structures of power, control, and exclusion? [ more ]

02.04.2008

Read also Part one of Harald Weilnböck's essay, in which Dr Goodheart analyzes a "hermeneutical assault" on Hitchcock's "Marnie"; and part two, in which he is confronted with an example of "trauma-therapy bashing".

 
Joschka Fischer

Not an island

Europe and the Middle East

Neighbourhoods Europe can play a major role in averting conflict in the Middle East, says Joschka Fischer. But does it have the instruments and institutions to do so? Given the urgency of the situation, can Europeans afford the luxury of being against Europe? [ more ]

14.03.2008
Damian Abbott

The Spine

privacy and health The introduction of a national health database in the UK is being carried out by a typically wasteful private finance initiative. Total data transparency may be good for corporations and security obsessed governments, but what does it mean for the recipients of "joined-up care"? [ more ]

20.03.2008
Katrine Kielos

This Bud's for you

US politics Ronald Reagan's ability to get working men to vote for policies clearly not in their interests casts a long shadow over US politics post 9/11. In the US presidential race, winning the masculinity battle will be crucial, writes Katrine Kielos. [ more ]

07.03.2008
Peter Bergmann, Teodor Münz, Frantisek Novosád, Paul Patton, Richard Rorty, Jan Sokol, Leslie Paul Thiele

What does Nietzsche mean to philosophers today?

Philosophy Excessively sensitive, anti-liberal, and irrelevant, or radical, prescient, and misunderstood? Six philosophers answer Kritika&Kontext's questions on Nietzsche. Their responses make one thing clear: Nietzsche still divides opinion. [Lithuanian version added, part I of III] [ more ]

15.02.2008
 

Eurozine News Item

Gallery for Cultural Journals at the Alte Schmiede, Vienna

news item Cultural journals have always been a central part of the programme at the Alte Schmiede (Old Smithy) in Vienna. Now, a broad selection of Austrian and European cultural journals, among them numerous Eurozine partner journals, can be read in their Gallery for Cultural Journals that opened on 11 February at Schönlaterngasse 7 in Vienna. [ more ]

18.03.2008
 

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In Focus

Shared space, divided society

Focal point: Cultural diversity Migration is part of modern society, meaning more and more people of different ethnic, religious, and cultural backgrounds live together in Europe. The multitude of perspectives and experiences represents an enormous resource, but as cultural conflicts inherent in today's urban societies become visible, doubts are also raised about the value of diversity. In cooperation with the European Cultural Foundation, Eurozine presents a broad take on the issue that goes beyond the common dichotomy between multicultural segregation and the forceful assimilation of the "melting pot". [ more ]

 

Eurozine conference

Changing places (What's normal, anyway?)

The "revolution to normality" was a crucial metaphor of 1989 and beyond. Yet, as speakers at the 2007 Eurozine conference pointed out, the slogan bears more emotive force than conceptual clarity. Today's eastern Europe is a changing place; traditionally, too, it has produced émigré writers who "changed place". Where better than Sibiu, Romania, to discuss "writing in exile?" [ more ]

 

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Editors' Choice

Niels Kadritzke

Headscarves, generals, and Turkish democracy

Turkey The Turkish government's move to lift the ban on headscarves in universities is part of an ongoing discussion on a new constitution that has the potential to decide the country's future. It could dramatically increase Turkey's chances of becoming a member of the EU. [ more ]

01.02.2008
Per Wirtén

Unacknowledged, unseen, unmentioned

Poverty in Europe

Poverty Impoverished German children dream of the US; one Greek person in four is in arrears with their most basic bills; sixty per cent of the poor in Romania have outdoor toilets. Cracks are appearing in Europe's beloved image of itself as the egalitarian alternative to the United States. [ more ]

25.01.2008
André Schiffrin

Controlling words

publishing Press and publishing concentration in France is exceptionally high yet there is barely any protest from within the sector itself. Media monopolization is by no means only a French issue, however: throughout Europe and the US, profit has become publishing's bottom line. [Lithuanian version added] [ more ]

17.01.2008
Toni Negri, Constantin Petcou, Doina Petrescu, Anne Querrien

What makes a biopolitical space?

A discussion with Toni Negri

Urban space The city, says Toni Negri, is where the "political diagonal" intersects the "biopolitical diagram". Yet "soft" forms of activism that create collectivities on micro, neighbourhood levels only go so far, says Negri, who favours rupture and revolution over accumulation and gradual change. [ more ]

21.01.2008
Laurent Dubois, Michel Giraud, Marc-Olivier Padis, Lilian Thuram, Patrick Weil

A history to be handed down

Interview with Lilian Thuram

"I'm not black, I'm French" The Caribbean-born French footballer Lilian Thuram talks about his longstanding interest in the history of slavery, about how sport can teach mutual respect, and why he still believes in the French model of integration. [ more ]

07.12.2007
Ali Fathollah-Nejad, Feridun Zaimoglu

You've got to swing your hips!

A conversation with Feridun Zaimoglu

Interview "This whole ethnic crap gets on my nerves!" Forthright as ever, Feridun Zaimoglu explains why the discourse on integration and multiculturalism serves conservative interests and demonizes young Muslims. [ more ]

16.11.2007
Jakob Norberg

No coffee

Bourgeoisie What is it about coffee – and coffeehouses – that makes it so agreeable to the bourgeoisie? asks Jakob Norberg in a brief social history of the dark, rich brew. And of the bourgeois public sphere. [ more ]

08.08.2007
 

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Eurozine Focal Points

Illiberal Europe?

Focal point: The new populism Parliament or the soapbox? Populist politics are enjoying renewed success in Europe, above all in the former socialist countries. Ivan Krastev, G.M.Tamás, Ralf Dahrendorf, Jacques Rupnik and others investigate the rise of "democratic illiberalism". [ more ]

18.09.2007

The city as stage for social upheaval

Focal Point From the western European city to the Third World megacity, it can be observed how the principle of privatization asserts itself in the urban social structure. With Swapan Chakravorty, Filip De Boeck, Ilija Trojanow, Ivaylo Ditchev, Robert Misik...[ more ]

Decentring Europe

Focal point Contemporary European discourse on Europe is often self-centred and provides one more link in a long chain of ideological or mythological constructions. Any reinvention of the concept of Europe that takes into account the complexities inherent in Europe's place in a globalized world must contain a critique of Eurocentrism. Learning from the South may be a key element in the rethinking – and unthinking – of "Europe". [ more ]

Cultural citizenship

Focal Point The concept of cultural citizenship responds to the multicultural context of contemporary societies, in which the concern with equality is increasingly being complemented with a concern with difference. Eurozine groups together texts articulating issues central to the concept. Including contributions by Gerard Delanty, Rainer Bauböck, Ivaylo Ditchev, Charles Taylor, Rada Ivekovic, António Sousa Ribeiro, and Axel Honneth. [ more ]

Changing Europe: 50 years of European integration

Focal point As political Europe turns 50, the questions about its future are as open as ever. Eurozine compiles a selection of articles on the European project: from analyses by Jacques Rupnik and Jan-Werner Müller of the current European crisis, to enquiries by Slavenka Drakulic and Ales Debeljak into transnational identity building; from Göran Rosenberg's federalist arguments, to György Spiró's hilarious parody of Brussels' bureaucratic literary ambitions. [ more ]

Post-secular Europe?

Religion and Politics Has the rapid and drastic process of secularization in western Europe come to an end? In a new Focal Point, Eurozine looks at different aspects of this question: Is religion a public or a private matter? Can there be such a thing as a European Islam? If so, what characterizes it? What role can religion – or religions – play when it comes to the emergence of a European solidarity? [ more ]

The future of war

Focal Point Are wars that are fought between nations a thing of the past, and are the future challenges more a case of ethnic strife, break-up of failed states, secession and civil wars? In a special focal point, Eurozine analyzes the changing face of warfare in the twenty-first century, in which terrorism and new security threats have profoundly transformed the way wars are conducted. [ more ]

Tatiana Zhurzhenko

Politics of border making and (cross-)border identities

Border making Have borders become irrelevant with the project of a united Europe which is supposed to overcome the historical divisions of the continent and the political isolation of its East? No, just the opposite. In a focal point guest-edited by Tatiana Zhurzhenko, essayists and researchers look at the dilemmas of border building and cross-border cooperation in the EU and its neighbourhood. [ more ]

European histories: Towards a grand narrative?

European histories In order for there to be solidarity within the enlarged EU, it will be necessary to develop a broader historical consciousness that accommodates the experiences of the new members. And if Russia's relations with its neighbours are to be harmonious, the taboos surrounding the Great Victory will need to be addressed. Read on for analyses from both sides of a historical divide. [ more ]

Europe talks to Europe: Towards a European public sphere?

EUROPEAN PUBLIC SPHERE The European integration project has made the discussion about transnational spaces for cultural and political debate acute. Can there at all be a common Europe without a pan-European public sphere, where potentially common values and ideas can be formed and transnational political institutions can find their legitimacy? [ more ]

Freedom of speech and the Danish cartoon controversy

Free speech Free speech is a fundamental human right and a central tenet of democracy. Or is it? Reactions to the Danish cartoon controversy show that liberals are re-evaluating what the right to free speech entails. [ more ]

Politics of translation

Translation Our understanding of the field of translation studies has in recent years taken on many more meanings and now encompasses spheres beyond the usual textual dimension: Translation today is as much about the translation of cultural, political, and historical contexts and concepts as it is about language. [ more ]

 

The Eurozine network at a glance

 

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