Latest Articles


01.09.2010
Sally Feldman

Great pretender

Feminist icon, anti-Catholic fabrication – or just a woman battling in a man's world? The German film "Die Päpstin" has already been written off by the Italian Bishops' Conference as a hoax. Sally Feldman explores reasons for the power and tenacity of the myth of Pope Joan. [ more ]

01.09.2010
Eurozine Review

The many, messy histories

31.08.2010
Susie Linfield

Aid wars

27.08.2010
Geir Gulliksen

Look at my dress


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27.08.2010

Arena | 4/2010

Platsen som inte finns [The place that is not]

Eurozine Review


01.09.2010
Eurozine Review

The many, messy histories

"New Humanist" sees no humanitarian solutions to political crises; "Fronesis" asks who the People are; "Osteuropa" examines the gaffe-prone politics of European identity; "Dilema veche" says leaving Romania is the most effective form of protest; "L'Homme" revisits 19th-century arguments for the abolition of prostitution; "Arena" questions the impact of the Swedish Sex Purchase Act; "Le Monde diplomatique" (Oslo) avoids another story of western selflessnes; and "Studija" welcomes a timely exhibition of Soviet-era painting.

18.08.2010
Eurozine Review

Performative biographism

04.08.2010
Eurozine Review

The grandmother of mass communication

07.07.2010
Eurozine Review

The better secularism

23.06.2010
Eurozine Review

The art of motorcycle tolerance



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Headlines
Eurozine Review

The many, messy histories

Journals digest "New Humanist" sees no humanitarian solutions to political crises; "Fronesis" asks who the People are; "Osteuropa" examines the gaffe-prone politics of European identity; "Dilema veche" says leaving Romania is the most effective form of protest; "L'Homme" revisits 19th-century arguments for the abolition of prostitution; "Arena" questions the impact of the Swedish Sex Purchase Act; "Le Monde diplomatique" (Oslo) avoids another story of western selflessnes; and "Studija" welcomes a timely exhibition of Soviet-era painting. [ more ]

01.09.2010

Susie Linfield

Aid wars

humanitarianism Humanitarian activists' refusal of politics, combined with their willingness to identify with politics, elicits doubt and even scorn from human-rights critics. Susie Linfield evaluates the controversial debate on the future of humanitarianism. [ more ]

31.08.2010
Cas Mudde

The populist radical Right: A pathological normalcy

populism According to the conventional view, the far-Right in Europe is antithetical to the values of liberal democracy. New research showing that far-Right ideology is a radicalization of mainstream values has a major impact on how rightwing populism is understood, writes Cas Mudde. [ more ]

31.08.2010
Sally Feldman

Great pretender

women in the church Feminist icon, anti-Catholic fabrication – or just a woman battling in a man's world? The German film "Die Päpstin" has already been written off by the Italian Bishops' Conference as a hoax. Sally Feldman explores reasons for the power and tenacity of the myth of Pope Joan. [ more ]

01.09.2010
 

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Geir Gulliksen

Look at my dress

gender equality When I was 22 I wanted to find a different way of writing about being a man, says Norwegian novelist Geir Gulliksen. It should be possible to be as gentle as a boy or as reckless as a girl. But gender stereotypes have not changed as radically as we think. [ more ]

27.08.2010
Júlia Garraio

Rape as the trope of a failed process of coming to terms with the past

sexual violence As a tropes that stand for two different but equally failed forms of coming to terms with the past, the rapes portrayed in two contemporary German novels serve as keys to understanding the postwar history of Eastern and Western Germany. [ more ]

16.08.2010
Ingeborg Reichle, Frank Rösl

Art and science: An interdisciplinary approach

science and art Not only artists but also scientists work with images, symbols and metaphors, draw on their intuition and make use of coincidence. How the humanities can inform a non-classical and non-reductionist approach to cancer research and living systems as a whole. [ more ]

17.08.2010
 

new focal point

The bonfire of the universities

New focal point The uni's burning! Die Uni brennt! The slogan was everywhere in the German-speaking space last winter, as the protests at the University of Vienna set off a wave of similar strikes, first at Austrian universities, then beyond: in Frankfurt, Heidelberg, Marburg, Zürich... 2009/10 saw further protests at universities in Athens, Zagreb, Marseilles and London. The Bologna Process, one of the main points of contention, also marked its ten-year anniversary on 12 March this year by officially inaugurating the European Higher Education Area. Eurozine surveys a debate enflaming (not only) Europe. [ more ]

01.07.2010
 
Faisal Devji

Loving the enemy: Al-Qaeda's vision of the West

terrorism 9/11 organizer Khalid Sheikh Mohammed exploited his trial to remind the court of its human rights obligations, while Osama bin Laden's statements include appeals to religious pluralism. Al-Qaeda's use of liberal categories is central to its rhetoric, writes Faisal Devji. [German version added] [ more ]

09.08.2010
Pascal Fouché, Olivier Mongin, Marc-Olivier Padis

Will the book enter the digital age?

An interview with Pascal Fouché

the future of the book The digitization of the book has brought a new balance of power in the trade, with established publishers locked in struggle with the new digital distributors. Pascal Fouché discusses whether publishers are prepared for the dematerialization of the printed word. [ more ]

29.07.2010
Maria Eismont, Alexei Venediktov

Russia's rules of engagement

media "The fact that peole who were working freely in the 1990s now work in a way that is no longer free is the result of fear." Alexei Venediktov, editor-in-chief of independent Russian radio station Ekho Moskvy, tells Maria Eismont about dealing with death threats, censorship and the Kremlin. [ more ]

04.08.2010
Les Back

The listeners

cultural theory Primo Levi, radioman Studs Terkel and literary traveller Flemming Rřgilds animate an alternative way to live, achieved through two people hearing each other, writes Les Back. Active listening can create another set of social relations and ultimately a new kind of society. [ more ]

03.08.2010
 
Eurozine News Item

New Eurozine associate: ICORN

Network News ICORN joins Eurozine as an associate. Run from Stavanger, Norway, ICORN invites persecuted writers to dwell in a safe haven in one of more than 30 member cities where they can express themselves freely, without fear of being censored or silenced. [ more ]

06.08.2010
 
Barbara Holub

Three chapters for a future of the unplanned

gallery In cooperation with "dérive", the Eurozine Gallery presents Barbara Holub. Her drawings create an opportunity to reassess habitual ways of seeing, and tell us: there are no innocent images; the images are already in us, writes Ines Gebetsroither. [ more ]

01.07.2010
 

Europe talks to Europe

László Rajk, Martin M. Simecka

Dilemma '89: My father was a communist

Debate The Slovak author and journalist Martin M. Simecka and Hungarian architect and former samizdat publisher László Rajk are not only former dissidents of the younger generation, but also the sons of well-known persecuted communists. In the first debate in the Eurozine series "Europe talks to Europe", they discussed the still unanswered questions surrounding the involvement of their fathers' generation in post-war communism. A candid and riveting exchange. [Romanian version added] [ more ]

07.05.2010
 

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The Eurozine network at a glance

 

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Focal points     click for more

The bonfire of the universities

http://www.eurozine.com/comp/focalpoints/bologna.html
University strikes coincide with the ten-year anniversary of the Bologna process: on the debate enflaming (not only) Europe. [more]

Climate of change?

Green turnaround or business as usual in the global hothouse? Debating the politics of climate change. [more]

Post-secular Europe

From the cartoon crisis and minaret ban to the multiculturalism debate: on the politics of post-secular Europe. [more]

Editor's choice     click for more

Faisal Devji
Loving the enemy: Al-Qaeda's vision of the West

http://www.eurozine.com/articles/2010-08-09-devji-en.html
Al-Qaeda's use of liberal categories is central to its rhetoric on war and justice, writes Faisal Devji. [more]

Pascal Fouché
Will the book enter the digital age?

The author of an encyclopaedia of the book discusses how the dematerialization of the printed word affects the balance of power in publishing. [more]

Tomas Venclova
Vilnius: The city as object of nostalgia

Lithuania's capital is close to the heart of many different nationalities who have at one time or another called it "home". [more]

Debate series     click for more

Europe talks to Europe

http://www.eurozine.com/comp/europetalkstoeurope.html
From Autumn 2009 to Spring 2011, Eurozine organizes a series of debates in various central and eastern European cities. [more]

Literature     click for more

Katharina Raabe
As the fog lifted

http://www.eurozine.com/articles/2009-10-08-raabe-en.html
In the twenty years since the fall of communism, literature has been lifting the fog settled over eastern central Europe. [more]

Literary perspectives
The re-transnationalization of literary criticism

Eurozine's series of essays aims to provide an overview of diverse literary landscapes in Europe. Covered so far: Croatia, Sweden, Austria, Estonia, Ukraine, Northern Ireland, Slovenia, the Netherlands and Hungary. [more]

Behind the headlines     click for more

Zoltan Tabori
Guns, fire and ditches

http://www.eurozine.com/articles/2009-12-15-tabori-en.html
On crime and anti-Roma racism in a small community facing increased competition for employment and education. [more]

Conferences     click for more

Eurozine emerged from an informal network dating back to 1983. Since that time, a variety of European cultural magazines have met once a year in European cities to exchange ideas and experiences. In the meantime, approximately 100 periodicals from almost every European country have become involved in these meetings.
European histories
The 22nd European Meeting of Cultural Journals
Vilnius, 8-11 May 2009

http://www.eurozine.com/comp/focalpoints/vilnius_european_histories.html
The 22nd European Meeting of Cultural Journals took place in Vilnius, Lithuania, 8 to 11 May 2009. Under the heading "European Histories", the Eurozine conference explored the role of history and memory in forming new identities in a Europe in change. [more]

Multimedia     click for more

http://www.eurozine.com/comp/multimedia.html
Multimedia section including videos of past Eurozine conferences in Vilnius (2009) and Sibiu (2007). [more]


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