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03.07.2009
Toomas Hendrik Ilves

Who are we? Where are we?

National identity and mental geography

Over the last thousand years, Finland, Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania have had multiple identities and been members of several empires. Now, writes the President of Estonia, "we should be looking to create identities that go beyond those that history has foisted upon us". [ more ]

02.07.2009
Martin M. Simecka

Still not free

01.07.2009
Stefan Jonsson

The first man

29.06.2009
Tatiana Zhurzhenko

The geopolitics of memory

25.06.2009
Timothy Snyder

Holocaust: The ignored reality


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Eurozine Review


24.06.2009
Eurozine Review

So what's our problem?

"Hungarian Quarterly" divines the future of the forint; "Index on Censorship" gives libel law a bad press; "Samtiden" doubts whether Norwegian police women are any freer with the hijab; "Le Monde diplomatique" (Berlin) applies the belt to Europe's cordon sanitaire; "Mittelweg 36" sees solidarity outgrow the nation; "Roots" says yes to Europe, but not at any cost; "Kulturos barai" does not dismiss the idea of a new Lithuanian Grand Duchy; "Le Monde diplomatique" (Oslo) calls the European elections a farce; "Rili" wants to keep the market out of universities; and "Fronesis" explains what 2°C means in an expertocracy.

09.06.2009
Eurozine Review

Happy birthday, Mr Habermas

26.05.2009
Eurozine Review

In monads' land

05.05.2009
Eurozine Review

Advanced profligate capitalism

21.04.2009
Eurozine Review

A kind of Tory communist



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Articles

Celebrating Einstein

This year Germany is celebrating the centenary of Albert Einstein's theory of relativity. The journal Gegenworte reflects on the "eventization" of sciences.

A whirlwind of science festivals, hands-on physics exhibitions, and other record-breaking cultural events is blowing across Germany, as the country celebrates the centenary of Albert Einstein's theory of relativity. The Einstein-year is marketing the world's best known scientist and public intellectual in every way possible. Reason enough for Berlin-based journal Gegenworte to diagnose "Einsteinitis". In its new issue, Gegenworte focuses on the "eventization" of the sciences – and what this means for the sciences themselves and for German national identity.

Eurozine presents three of the most interesting articles from Gegenworte. Austrian philosopher of science Ulrike Felt investigates this yearning for great men and impressive events. She finds a new culture in science. Calls have been made for the sciences to be more participatory, and to take a more appropriate place in society.

Jürgen Trabant, Professor of Romance philology at the Free University of Berlin, draws attention to the fact that one of the tragic moments in intellectual history is connected to the person of Einstein: the passage of "mind" from one country to another – in this case, because of the expulsion of Jewish scientists from Nazi Germany. This leads Trabant to consider the conditions a country should offer its scientists in order to keep them.

For Germany, the events around Einstein could become an "occasion" and bring a turnaround in the problematic Jewish-German relationship, writes Gegenworte-editor Hazel Rosenstrauch. With the celebration mania, Einstein, who after leaving Germany in 1932 wanted never to set foot on German soil again, is being turned into a public hero for the Germans. For German identity and the construction of an acceptable past, this is, ironically enough, so much the better.



Aricles:

Ulrike Felt
A new culture of science? (de) (en)
Or: The yearning for great men and big events
In response to the world-wide celebrated Einstein year, Ulrike Felt looks into the mechanisms of making science into a public event. [2005-06-08]

Jürgen Trabant
Losing Einstein, Celebrating Einstein (de)
Jürgen Trabant draws attention to the fact that one of the tragic moments of intellectual history is connected to the person of Einstein: the passage of "mind" from one country to another. [2005-06-08]

Hazel Rosenstrauch
Building blocks for a theory of Jewish atonement (de)
Are the celebrations around Einstein in Germany a possibility to integrate this great mind and public intellecutal into German identity and to construct an acceptable past? [2005-06-08]


 



Published 2005-06-08


Original in English
© Eurozine
 

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