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23.05.2012
Eurozine Review

A protest of Scrooges

"Kulturos barai" talks to Daniel Chirot about modernity, crisis and ideology; "NZ" plots the new Russian class-consciousness; "Le Monde diplomatique" (Oslo) asks which way the middle class will swing; "Wespennest" explains what anarchism can do for you; "Dilema Veche" recalls better days for Romanian journalism; "Reset" abandons print for web; "Letras Libres" reveals the political Borges; "dérive" rescues the bungalow from historical oblivion; and "Vikerkaar" profiles Estonian situationist duo Johnson & Johnson. [ more ]

22.05.2012
Daniel Chirot, Almantas Samalavicius

Ideology never ends

22.05.2012
Anna Aslanyan, Stewart Home

Moving the goalposts

21.05.2012
Jacques Rupnik

The euro crisis: Central European lessons

21.05.2012
Kenan Malik

To name the unnameable


New Issues


22.05.2012

Le Monde diplomatique (Oslo) | 5/2012

Quo vadis, middelklassen? [Quo vadis, middle class?]

Eurozine Review


23.05.2012
Eurozine Review

A protest of Scrooges

"Kulturos barai" talks to Daniel Chirot about modernity, crisis and ideology; "NZ" plots the new Russian class-consciousness; "Le Monde diplomatique" (Oslo) asks which way the middle class will swing; "Wespennest" explains what anarchism can do for you; "Dilema Veche" recalls better days for Romanian journalism; "Reset" abandons print for web; "Letras Libres" reveals the political Borges; "dérive" rescues the bungalow from historical oblivion; and "Vikerkaar" profiles Estonian situationist duo Johnson & Johnson.

09.05.2012
Eurozine Review

Sudden and slow-acting poisons

18.04.2012
Eurozine Review

Not a Prospero in sight

21.03.2012
Eurozine Review

To hell in a handbasket



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Du
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du was a member of the Eurozine network from November 2000 to November 2011.

English
du is a monthly dossier of a broad range of cultural phenomena. du takes up current issues and problems, portrays the life and work of important cultural figures, and documents the cultural reflection on society. du thinks of itself as a European institution; taken together, its issues form nothing less than an encyclopaedia of the contemporary. Each issue includes a du culture calendar listing selected exhibitions in Europe and elsewhere.

Deutsch
Monat für Monat legt du ein Dossier aus dem weiten Feld der Kultur vor. Thematisiert Phänomene und Probleme, porträtiert Leben und Werk bedeutender Kulturschaffender und dokumentiert Kultur als einen Ort, an dem über Gesellschaft nachgedacht wird. du versteht sich als europäische Institution; die Folge der Hefte bildet nichts geringeres als eine Enzyklopädie der Gegenwart in Einzelthemen.




Articles published in Eurozine


Ursula März

From rags to riches

Madonna, like millions of other girls, dreamt from early childhood of becoming a star. Her dream came true because she was convinced that it was possible in America, through sheer willpower and the willingness to be brutal with herself. [more]

23.05.2007


Hadeel Rizq-Qazzaz

Shut out by the wall, shut in by tradition

Palestinian women are the hardest hit by the wall

"The wall creates new, irrevocable facts in women's lives". The stories of four women living in the shadow of the Israel-Palestine wall. [more]

05.09.2006


Thomas Hettche

In the icey cold of a precious moment

"What is it that people find here, 1856 metres above sea level? Proximity to the heavens? The snow, the cold, the silence, the clarity of the air? Or is it the intuition of the disappearance of the self?" Thomas Hettche on the Swiss village of Sils Maria. [more]

29.07.2006


Natalka Sniadanko

Journey through Germany

In her journey through Germany, Ukrainian author Natalka Sniadanko discovers traces of her home country everywhere, as well as stereotypes about it. [more]

19.06.2006


Jenny Erpenbeck

Visitation

Part of a house stands on appropriated Jewish land. When the systems changed so did the owners. But who does the house really belong to? [more]

19.06.2006


Wolfram Goertz

Johann Sebastian Bach: The geometric composer

Twenty-three attempts to fathom the cosmos Bach and his enigmatic musical order -- from the womb to eternity. [more]

06.04.2006


Elmar Holenstein

The navel of the world

"What does he know of Europe who only Europe knows?" said Rudyard Kipling. A plea for looking beyond the borders of fatherland and mother tongue. [more]

26.07.2006


Georg Brunold

Europe's inventors of the figure of mourning

A modern history of Turkey's Greek minority

The Greek minority in Turkey have suffered since 1920. Today, the EU represents their greatest hope for better prospects. [more]

02.11.2005


Klaus Kreiser

Arrival in the twenty-first century

Istanbul and modernity

Istanbul's Ottoman heritage has been fighting a losing battle against modernization since the 1920s. For most residents of the city today, there is no alternative to a Western way of life. [more]

02.11.2005


Elif Safak

The power of the covered women

Istanbul's feminine district

A pink halo hovers over Istanbul's traditional district of Üsküdar, where many of the monuments, mosques, and fountains were built by or for women. [more]

02.11.2005


Hanna Rutishauser

Whoever has a house, survives

Life for migrants to Istanbul's suburbs

Gecekondu, homes built semi-legally on public land, first appeared on the outskirts of Turkish cities in the 1950s. Originally, residents were granted ownership of their property. Now, around half pay rent. All the while, gecekondu districts continue to aggregate on the edges of Turkey's cities. [more]

02.11.2005


György Spiró

Imre Kertész and his time

Not Jewish. Not Hungarian. Not anti-German enough.

The "perfect normality" of his fiction placed Imre Kertész on the sidelines of Hungarian literature during socialism, and still causes dislike, says a leading Hungarian playwright. [more]

20.07.2005


Helga Leiprecht

Imre Kertész. The stranger

An interview with Imre Kertész, in which he talks about discrimination, censorship, and linguistic isolation, and why he is at home with his alienation. [more]

20.07.2005


Sonallah Ibrahim

The flying drapes of the Kaabah

Sonallah Ibrahim leads us through the eventful present and past of Saudi Arabia's relations to its neighbours. He concentrates on the history of the famous Kaabah drapes and the robbery attempted by Muhammad al-Fassi and his sister Hind. [more]

03.01.2003


Dieter Bachmann

Walser's Wake, 1956 - 1966

Robert Walser's colleagues were also his readers. His texts are of a transitory character and keep turning away. [more]

30.10.2002


Pedro Almodovar

Location

Talk to Her: The Set from the Viewpoint of the Director

Pedro Almodóvar's thoughts on photography and the differences between photos and pictures in motion. [more]

04.09.2002


Elisabeth Bronfen

Women's Law

Interpreting Female Colours and the Male Gaze

Elisabeth Bronfen reflects on Pedro Almodovar's theory of colours, muted women, and the desires of his characters. [more]

04.09.2002


Helmut Bünder, Franz Fischler, René Höltschi

"As long as people want to eat and drink, there'll be farmers"

An Interview with Franz Fischler, Member of the European Commission Responsible for Agriculture

Do our farmers have a future? Why does the EU need an agricultural policy? And will the current principles survive the enlargement process? [more]

26.07.2002


Doris Krystof, Marco Meier

Hoping for the Slightest Sign of Truth

.. [more]

01.06.2001



Jacqueline Hénard

The Left's Best Fiend

As a part of a dossier on right-wing radicalism and populism in Europe, Jacqueline Hénard traces how the strategy to power of the right-wing politican Bruno Mégret unwittingly led to fall back to the margins of interior politics. [more]

20.12.2000


Sergio Romano

An Eerie Safeguard

As a part of a dossier on right-wing radicalism and populism in Europe, Sergio Romano looks at the parties in coalition with Berlusconi. [more]

20.12.2000


Alexander Böckli

The Ghosts I Called To

As part of a dossier on right-wing radicalism and populism in Europe, Alexander Böckli writes about the rise of such groups in Switzerland - and their seemless adaptation with the times. [more]

20.12.2000


Karl-Markus Gauß

For Austria, Entirely Compatible

As part of a dossier on right-wing radicalism and populism in Europe, Karl-Markus Gauß writes about a new form of right-wing radicalism in Austria: bourgeois and polite, it appeals to a new - primarily economic - type of racism, which appears entirely in line with the "European values". [more]

20.12.2000


Jacqueline Schärli

Editorial "du" 4/2005

[more]

29.04.2005


Christian Seiler

Editorial "du"

[more]

01.09.2003


Rafael Newman

Wilderness: The True Nature of Culture

Summary for "du" 05.02 [more]

02.05.2002



 

Focal points     click for more

The EU: Broken or just broke?

http://www.eurozine.com/comp/focalpoints/eurocrisis.html
Brought on by the global economic recession, the eurocrisis has been exacerbated by serious faults built into the monetary union. In a new Eurozine focal point, contributors discuss whether the EU is not only broke, but also broken -- and if so, whether Europe's leaders are up to the task of fixing it. [more]

European histories (2): Concord and conflict

http://www.eurozine.com/comp/focalpoints/eurohistories2.html
Broadening the question of a common European narrative beyond the East-West divide. How are contested interpretations of historical and recent events activated in the present, uniting and dividing European societies? [more]

Changing media -- Media in change

Media change is about more than just the "newspaper crisis" and the iPad: property law, privacy, free speech and the functioning of the public sphere are all affected. On a field experiencing profound and constant transformation. [more]

Support Eurozine     click for more

If you appreciate Eurozine's work and would like to support our contribution to the establishment of a European public sphere, see information about making a donation.

Editor's choice     click for more

Slavenka Drakulic
The tune of the future
Italy: old Europe, new Europe, changing Europe

http://www.eurozine.com/articles/2012-03-15-drakulic-en.html
Travelling around Italy, Slavenka Drakulic observes one kind of Europe being replaced by another. Instead of attempting to conserve the cultural past, we should accept that migration will adapt much of what we consider "European" to its own image. [more]

Klaus-Michael Bogdal
Europe invents the Gypsies
The dark side of modernity

Social segregation, cultural appropriation: the six-hundred-year history of the European Roma, as recorded in literature and art, represents the underside of the European subject's self-invention as agent of civilising progress in the world. [more]

George Prevelakis
Greece: The history behind the collapse

Greece's economic crisis has its roots in a political pact dating back to the foundation of the modern state. The threat posed to Europe by the Greek breakdown is less contagion than a wave of anti-western feeling. [more]

Debate series     click for more

Europe talks to Europe

http://www.eurozine.com/comp/europetalkstoeurope.html
Nationalism in Belgium might be different from nationalism in Ukraine, but if we want to understand the current European crisis and how to overcome it we need to take both into account. The debate series "Europe talks to Europe" is an attempt to turn European intellectual debate into a two-way street. [more]

Literature     click for more

Steve Sem-Sandberg
Even nameless horrors must be named

http://www.eurozine.com/articles/2011-09-23-semsandberg-en.html
It is high time to lift the aesthetic state of emergency that has surrounded witness literature for so long, writes Steve Sem-Sandberg. It is not important who writes, nor even what their motives are. What counts is the "literary efficiency". [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

Mykola Riabchuk
Tymoshenko: Wake-up call for the EU

The EU shouldn't be surprised by the Tymoshenko verdict: its support of anything nominally reformist has been perceived as acceptance of a range of repressions, argues Mykola Riabchuk. [more]

Conferences     click for more

Eurozine emerged from an informal network dating back to 1983. Since then, European cultural magazines have met annually in European cities to exchange ideas and experiences. Around 100 journals from almost every European country are now regularly involved in these meetings.
Arrivals/Departures: European harbour cities as places of migration
The 24th European Meeting of Cultural Journals
Hamburg, 14-16 September 2012

http://www.eurozine.com/comp/hamburg2012.html
Harbour cities as places of movement, of immigration and emigration, as places of inclusion and exclusion, develop distinct modes of being that not only reflect different cultural traditions and political and social self-conceptions, but also communicate how they see themselves as part of the structure that is "Europe". The 2012 Eurozine conference will explore how European societies deal variously with the cultural legacy of the "harbour city". [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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