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1

Bauch, Martin, and Christian Oertel. "Late Medieval Plague Waves in in Eastern Germany and Bohemia." Historical Studies on Central Europe 4, no. 1 (2024): 30–67. http://dx.doi.org/10.47074/hsce.2024-1.03.

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This paper aims to enhance our knowledge about late-medieval epidemic outbreaks in specific parts of Eastern Central Europe. The first part on modern-day Eastern Germany discusses narrative evidence and its use in the current research on plague history, before bringing in municipal records on testaments and conveyances from Görlitz and Stralsund for the reconstruction of seasonality and mortality rates, as well as funeral inscriptions and pictorial evidence from Erfurt as indirect indicators of plague waves. After a brief discussion of the scarce narrative sources, the second part of the paper
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2

Esherick, Joseph W., and Jeffrey N. Wasserstrom. "Acting Out Democracy: Political Theater in Modern China." Journal of Asian Studies 49, no. 4 (1990): 835–65. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/2058238.

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For two and a half months in the spring of 1989, China's student actors dominated the world stage of modern telecommunications. Their massive demonstrations, the hunger strike during Gorbachev's visit, and the dramatic appearance of the Goddess of Democracy captured the attention of an audience that spanned the globe. As we write in mid-1990, the movement and its bloody suppression have already produced an enormous body of literature—from eyewitness accounts by journalists (Morrison 1989; Zhaoqiang, Gejing and Siyuan 1989) and special issues of scholarly journals (Australian Journal of Chinese
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Perenyei, Monika. "The Good Shepherd. On Endre Bálint’s late photomontages." Acta Historiae Artium 64, no. 1 (2024): 227–51. http://dx.doi.org/10.1556/170.2023.00009.

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In this paper I analyse the photomontages of Endre Bálint (1914–1986) in the context of the cultural politics of the Iron Curtain period in Eastern Europe and Hungary. First, the study takes a diachronic, historical approach to photomontage as a creative method that maintained continuity between the avant-garde generations of artists, a way of thinking and a creative process accordingly, cultivated in the circles of persecuted, banned or silenced artists experimenting during the decades from the 1920s to 1970s. Second, by placing Endre Bálint’s late photomontages (made after his 1963 return fr
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Лесів, Т. В. "ВІЗАНТИЗМ ЯК ПАРАДИГМА САКРАЛЬНОЇ ТВОРЧОСТІ (НА ПРИКЛАДІ ЦЕРКОВНОГО МАЛЯРСТВА ГАЛИЧИНИ XX — ПОЧАТКУ ХХІ СТОЛІТТЯ)". Вісник ХДАДМ, № 4 (3 листопада 2018): 60–68. https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.1477429.

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Many iconographers and art historians in Ukraine are convinced that Eastern Christian (Byzantine) iconography is a national artistic tradition since Christianity had been introduced on this territory from Byzantium. It has been widely noted that church art in Ukraine followed the Byzantine tradition until the 18 th century, after which it evolved under the influence of European classicism and academism. The idea of Byzantinism as a return to the tradition’s origins arose at the beginning of 20 th century. Since then many theologians, scholars and artists have tended to emphasize the uniq
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Rovny, Jan. "Party Competition Structure in Eastern Europe." East European Politics and Societies: and Cultures 29, no. 1 (2015): 40–60. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0888325414567535.

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The literature on party competition structure in eastern Europe varies between aggregated large-N studies that propose uniform patterns of party competition across the region on the one hand, and disaggregated, case-focused studies identifying a plurality of country-specific patterns on the other. This article finds that both suffer from theoretical weaknesses. The aggregated works, arguing for common unidimensionality of party competition in the region, overlook significant cross-national differences, while the case-focused works, suggesting country-specific multidimensionality, do not identi
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Polyakov, E. N., and O. P. Polyakova. "Life in Switzerland of Charles-Édouard Jeanneret known as Le Corbusier." Vestnik Tomskogo gosudarstvennogo arkhitekturno-stroitel'nogo universiteta. JOURNAL of Construction and Architecture 23, no. 3 (2021): 9–20. http://dx.doi.org/10.31675/1607-1859-2021-23-3-9-20.

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The article is devoted to the early design and social activities of the extraordinary French architect Charles-Édouard Jeanneret known as Le Corbusier (1887–1965), who is considered to be one of the founders of European Functionalism. His first design and pictorial works are considered together with his trips to Western Europe and the Middle East. This experience helped the architect to create his first conceptual versions and models of the modern architecture, which will be described in our further works.
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Rekawek, Kacper. "Referenced but Not Linear?" East European Politics and Societies: and Cultures 31, no. 1 (2016): 179–200. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0888325416678657.

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This article contextualizes the seemingly robust Central-Eastern European reactions to terrorist events in Western Europe, whilst examining the difference between how counterterrorism (CT) in Central-Eastern Europe looks in theory and how it works in practice. It constitutes the first comparative study, across eight case studies, focusing solely on CT-related issues of the post-2004 EU entrants, and one of the very first assessing CT developments in post-communist Europe available in English. The article addresses a serious gap in terrorism studies that are oriented towards works on terrorism
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Preda, Caterina. "The transnational ‘memorialization’ of monumental socialist public works in Eastern Europe." International Journal of Cultural Studies 23, no. 3 (2019): 401–21. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1367877919885950.

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This article analyses how three types of artistic memorialization of monumental socialist public works transform these into examples of socialist modernism in Eastern Europe. First, it tackles the issue of rendering socialist architecture visible through the Socialist Modernism online platform. Second, it focuses on the collection of documentary proofs by six documentary photography projects in Eastern Europe. Finally, it looks at how four contemporary artists in Bulgaria, Romania, Lithuania, and the Czech Republic are resignifying socialist art in their artistic practices. Analysed from a per
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O'reılly, William. "Turks and Indians on the Margins of Europe." Belleten 65, no. 242 (2001): 243–56. http://dx.doi.org/10.37879/belleten.2001.243.

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Knowledge of emerging New World settlements and opportunities was quick to diffuse from the western seaboard of Europe to central and eastern parts of the continent. This article contends that cultural knowledge and perceptions were ethnically filtered by Europeans desirous to include new knowledge in existing paradigms. Diverse aspects of New World society appealed to different communities and news and information was consciously manipulated and re-presented, using stock cliches, to be made more palatable to the target community. Blanket verbal and pictorial representations of 'America' and '
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Moroz-Grzelak, Lilla. "Bałkańskie kompleksy „gorszej Europy” w prozie Ermisa Lafazanovskiego." Slavia Meridionalis 12 (August 31, 2015): 45–56. http://dx.doi.org/10.11649/sm.2012.004.

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Balkan complexes of “worse Europe” in works of Ermis LafazanovskiOver the centuries, the European continent was divided into different spaces according to different axes: both geopolitical and economic history of East and West and the historical and geocultural division into North and South. Differentiation was present in Europe in vari­ous ways, either by the use of geographical terms, which became the indicators of difference, or how the politicians wanted to see it – split into Western Europe, Eastern Europe or Central and Eastern Europe. They represent the heterogeneity and diverse influen
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Luca, Ioana. "Eastern European Exilic Trajectories in Post-1989 Life Writing." European Journal of Life Writing 2 (August 21, 2013): T61—T80. http://dx.doi.org/10.5463/ejlw.2.60.

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My article offers a comparative analysis of autobiographical works by Susan Suleiman, Andrei Codrescu and Kapka Kassabova with a three-pronged interest. First, I aim to further the discussion about exilic identities emerging from Eastern Europe; second, I show the “shifting national, global imaginaries” that post-1989 Eastern European exiles’ life writing registers; and third, I analyze how Suleiman, Codrescu and Kassabova negotiate affective attachments withtheir “native” Eastern European countries in the aftermath of the Cold War. I consider their life writing important as it captures the ov
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Nardin, Terry. "Moral Renewal: The Lessons of Eastern Europe." Ethics & International Affairs 5 (March 1991): 1–14. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1747-7093.1991.tb00227.x.

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Nardin uses the Eastern European experience of the late 1980s and the works of Adam Michnik and Vaclav Havel to demonstrate the traditional cosmopolitan Kantian notion of morality in the “appeal to universal human values.” Nardin uses three major elements to argue the impossibility of such a concept: “the law of nature,” based on Stoic and Judeo-Christian foundation, focusing on reason and rationality of the individual rather than custom or divine authority; the uniqueness of various cultures challenging the universal “cosmopolitan” outlook on morality; and the differences among universal prin
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Hare, Paul. "State-building for the market economy in Eastern Europe." Acta Oeconomica 70, no. 4 (2020): 471–91. http://dx.doi.org/10.1556/032.2020.00032.

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AbstractKornai's earlier works embodied the idea that state institutions formed a system with a strong tendency to reproduce itself, and hence to resist minor reforms. Thus, at the end of socialism, huge changes were needed in politics, economics, and the law to build a new system oriented towards the market-type economy, which would again be stable, self-reinforcing and self-sustaining. Transition promoted the development of new states in Eastern Europe that conformed to the Copenhagen criteria for the EU accession. Were we too hasty in thinking that we had succeeded? The new systems are not
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Skorupinska, Katarzyna. "Employee Rights and Labour Relations in Central and Eastern Europe." Journal of Global Economy 6, no. 5 (2010): 343–56. http://dx.doi.org/10.1956/jge.v6i5.71.

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Transformation of economies in Central and Eastern Europe countries has not been accompanied by sufficient guarantees for social dimension. Following that, the economic recession has particularly badly affected these countries. However, well-functioning social dialogue and regulated labour relations with well developed employee rights are the very bases of social guarantees. The analysis carried out in this paper leads to a conclusion that employee representation in workplaces in Central and Eastern Europe is still trade unions’ domain, in spite of the 2002 Directive’s implementation and (
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Leon, Crina. "Jardar Seim and the history of a Norwegian-Romanian story." Romanian Journal for Baltic and Nordic Studies 8, no. 1 (2016): 91–98. http://dx.doi.org/10.53604/rjbns.v8i1_7.

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Jardar Seim is a historian and member of The Norwegian Historical Association, a specialist in Eastern European history which he taught at the University of Oslo between 1983 and 2002, and moreover a keen speaker of the Romanian language. He is the author of the works Øst-Europas historie/The History of Eastern Europe (Aschehoug, Oslo, 1994) and Øst-Europa etter murens fall/Eastern Europe after the Fall of the Wall (Aschehoug Forum, Oslo, 1999) and co-editor of the book Romanian-Norwegian Relations. Diplomatic Documents, 1905-1947 (Romanian Cultural Institute, Bucharest, 2007), one of the very
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Kudryavtsev, Oleg. "The Geographical Discoveries in the East of Europe and Their Influence on the Self-Consciousness of the Renaissance Culture." Novaia i noveishaia istoriia, no. 4 (2023): 82. http://dx.doi.org/10.31857/s013038640025183-9.

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In this article the author examines the news of European cosmographers of the first quarter of the 16th century about the lands of Eastern Europe discovered at that time. In this article the author examines the news of European cosmographers of the first quarter of the sixteenth century about the lands of Eastern Europe discovered at that time. In the cosmographic work of the Polish author Mathias de Miechow, who relied on the observations of his predecessors – Julius Pomponius Laetus, Pius II, as well as Catalan, Genoese, Venetian cartographers of the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries – a si
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Goldberg Igra, Caroline. "Framing the shtetl." Umění 72, no. 3 (2024): 283–94. https://doi.org/10.54759/art-2024-0307.

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This article explores the specific manner in which Cubism, encountered not only in Paris but in artistic centres in Central-Eastern Europe, affected the work of Jewish artists seeking to develop their art in the early 20th century. Emerging from persecuted corners of Eastern Europe, this artistic population could not help be entranced by all that Western avant-garde artistic circles had to offer. Their specific interest in Cubism and the opportunity it gave them to abandon the iron hold of traditional perspective was completely expected. Yet the reception and understanding of this style as it
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18

Hnidyk, Iryna. "Central and Eastern Europe in European Unity Vision of St. John Paul II through Heritage of St. Cyril and Methodius." Hiperboreea 6, no. 1 (2019): 17–28. http://dx.doi.org/10.5325/hiperboreea.6.1.0017.

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Abstract During the Soviet and post-Soviet period, countries of Central and Eastern Europe experienced difficult social transformation processes. At the same time, these states remained marginal in European integration projects. In this context, the European integration vision of Pope John Paul II became relevant. He emphasized the important role of Central and Eastern part of Europe, its identity, spiritual and cultural heritage in the context of the European unity concepts. St. Cyril and Methodius became the special symbols and the personification of identity of Central and Eastern Europe in
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19

Kozachuk, Oleh, and Grigore Vasilescu. "The US Foreign Policy towards Eastern Europe: State of the Field." Історико-політичні проблеми сучасного світу, no. 43 (June 15, 2021): 40–46. http://dx.doi.org/10.31861/mhpi2021.43.40-46.

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The US foreign policy towards Eastern European countries, especially those that are members of the Eastern Partnership, is poorly understood. Therefore, the analysis of recent works (monographs and scientific articles published in peer-reviewed journals) is necessary to write further research and increase Washington’s interest in the region. This paper aims to familiarize scholars with recent researches and help them evaluate the existing scholarship in the field. A systematic approach was used to filter the publications in the field. After 2014, very few scientific publications focused on the
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Vereshchahina-Biliavska, Olena, Nataliia Mozgalova, Iryna Baranovska, Yuliia Moskvichova, and Olesia Cherkashyna. "ANTHROPOLOGICAL DIMENSIONS OF THE MODERN MUSICAL ART OF EASTERN EUROPE." SOCIETY. INTEGRATION. EDUCATION. Proceedings of the International Scientific Conference 4 (May 28, 2021): 716–26. http://dx.doi.org/10.17770/sie2021vol4.6331.

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The peculiarities of the world model and the human model in the Eastern European music art of the postmodern era were revealed. The research is based on a hermeneutical analysis of the contemporary Russian and Ukrainian composers’ works. The research method builds on the systematic and historical approaches. It allows to consider the individual musical text as a subsystem of a higher order system. The sociocultural context was considered. The scientific novelty consists in revealing the specifics of the Eastern European artists’ worldview of the last third of the XX and beginning of the XXI ce
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Skorupińska, Katarzyna. "Conditions of workers' participation in the European context-works councils structures in the Central and Eastern Europe." Comparative Economic Research. Central and Eastern Europe 12, no. 3 (2009): 29–44. http://dx.doi.org/10.2478/v10103-009-0010-y.

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The implementation of the 2002 Directive caused establishment of participation structures in coimtries of the Central and Eastern Europę following the pattern of works councils in Western Europę. The institiitions of workers participation have right to information and consultation but they do not possess the right to codetermination which for a long time has been granted to most works councils in the old EU Member States. Works councils in the new EU Member States have not been established on the road of organie development but they had to define their entitlements and evolve organizational st
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Sadıqova, Rahila. "AZERBAIJANI REALITIES MANIFESTED IN “ONE THOUSAND AND A QUARTER OF AN HOUR. TATAR TALES”." Scientific Journal of Polonia University 61, no. 6 (2024): 114–22. http://dx.doi.org/10.23856/6114.

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At the beginning of the 18th century a new literary trend with an Eastern orientation was emerging in Europe, especially in French literature. This innovation began when Antoine Gallen first translated “One Thousand and one nights” into French in 1704, and Western readers showed great interest in that ancient Arabic monument. As orientalists and translators of the time saw that Arab tales that caused a stir in Europe were loved and gained with fame, they turned to Eastern sources and tried to create new translated works in this style. Over time, the readers, who were impressed by the tales abo
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Lasker, Daniel J. "Jewish Anti-Christian Polemical Treatises in Early Modern Central and Eastern Europe." Wrocławski Przegląd Teologiczny 26, no. 1 (2018): 61–72. https://doi.org/10.52097/wpt.2025.

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Jewish anti-Christian polemical treatises comprise a well-known genre in medieval Jewish literature. It is generally thought that these books were written in response to Christian missionary pressure. Yet, when considering Central and Eastern Europe in the early modern period, one sees that this genre is almost nonexistent, despite continuing Christian attempts at converting Jews. An analysis of medieval Jewish anti-Christian writings shows that rather than being necessarily a response to Christian missionary pressure, many of them are part of the larger Jewish theological enterprise. Hence, s
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GHIORGHIŢĂ, Eugen. "Book review: Bogdan Murgescu, The Romanian Countries between the Ottoman Empire and Christian Europe." Annals of "Spiru Haret". Economic Series 14, no. 1 (2014): 59. http://dx.doi.org/10.26458/1417.

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The works of Professor Bogdan Murgescu cover more than five centuries of economic, political and cultural history, of a wide geographical area, from the Atlantic to the Eastern borders of the former Ottoman Empire. .....
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Najafov, Ihor. "IDEAS OF EASTERN EUROPE IN THE MEMOIRS OF FRENCH MILITARY AND POLITICIANS OF THE NAPOLEONIC WARS." Intermarum history policy culture, no. 12 (March 31, 2023): 32–50. http://dx.doi.org/10.35433/history.112047.

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The purpose of the work: to analyze the ideas about Eastern Europe in the memoirs of French military and politicians of the Napoleonic Wars, as well as to investigate their input to the formation of the concept of «Eastern Europe». Methodology: during the writing of the article, both general scientific (comparison, idealization, ascent from abstract to concrete, content analysis, scientific modeling) and special-historical (historical-genetic, comparative-historical, systemic-structural) research methods were used. Scientific novelty: it consists in the fact that works on the history of concep
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Dumała, Hanna. "Zgromadzenie Regionów Europejskich jako grupa interesów regionalnych jednostek terytorialnych." Przegląd Europejski, Tom 1 (March 30, 2020): 77–93. http://dx.doi.org/10.31971/1641-2478pe.1.20.5.

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The aim of the article is to analyse activities of the Assembly of European Regions (AER) as an international interest group of sub-national territorial units at the regional level in Europe. The article presents the genesis of the Assembly, the evolution of its membership, as well as the tools and the channels of lobbying used. The text positively verifies the hypothesis that expansion of the Assembly on administrative regions from Central and Eastern Europe caused that strong political regions from Western Europe lost theirs interests in participating in AER’s works which, in turn, weakened
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Głowacka-Grajper, Małgorzata. "Memory in Post-communist Europe: Controversies over Identity, Conflicts, and Nostalgia." East European Politics and Societies: and Cultures 32, no. 4 (2018): 924–35. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0888325418757891.

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This article is part of the special cluster titled Social practices of remembering and forgetting of the communist past in Central and Eastern Europe, guest edited by Malgorzata Glowacka-Grajper Controversies over social memory form an important aspect of reality in the post-communist countries of Eastern Europe. On the one hand, there are debates about coming to terms with the communist past and the Second World War that preceded it (because important parts of the memory of the war were “frozen” during the communist era), and, on the other hand, and intimately connected to that, are discussio
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Davoliūtė, Violeta. "Agonistic homecomings: Holocaust postmemory, perspective and locality." Memory Studies 15, no. 3 (2022): 539–50. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/17506980221085524.

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This essay explores the relationship of trauma, memory and locality in works of autobiographical nonfiction by Daniel Mendelsohn, Rita Gabis and Julija Šukys. While the lineage of the first extends to historical victims of the Holocaust in Eastern Europe and the lineage of the latter extends (mainly) to historical perpetrators, their works are examined here as examples of third-generation Holocaust postmemory. Each reflects on the experience of war and displacement through the prism of the stories and silences that circulated in their families and émigré communities from Eastern Europe in Nort
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Savchuk, H. N. "MILITARY MEDICINE IN THE MEDIEVAL EASTERN EUROPE." Likarska sprava, no. 3-4 (June 30, 2020): 71–75. http://dx.doi.org/10.31640/jvd.3-4.2020(10).

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The article considers some evidences about military medicine in the Eastern Europe, especially on the modern Ukrainian territory, in 11th–13th centuries. Analogies from the West-European history are represented. The information from contemporary chronicles illuminates medieval medical thoughts in the practice of Rus’ physicians. Some facts are leaded out the logical way. Connections between contemporary conditions and the next development of medicine in late-medieval Ukraine are followed. Research Methodology. As the main method, a logical analysis is used that allows supplementing missing inf
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Malečková, Jitka. "Gender, History and ‘Small Europe’." European History Quarterly 40, no. 4 (2010): 685–700. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0265691410375506.

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Gender is a good place from which to start reflections on European history: gender history deliberately transcends borders and, at the same time, demonstrates the difficulties of writing European, or transnational, history. Focusing on recent syntheses of modern European history, both general works and those specifically devoted to gender, the article asks what kind of Europe emerges from the encounter between gender and history. It suggests that the writing of European history includes either Eastern Europe (and, sometimes, the Ottoman Empire) or a gender perspective, but seldom both. Thus, t
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Baranov, N. V. "Genesis and interpretation of the “precariat” concept in the countries of Western and Eastern Europe." Moscow State University Bulletin. Series 18. Sociology and Political Science 30, no. 1 (2024): 237–44. http://dx.doi.org/10.24290/1029-3736-2024-30-1-237-244.

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The purpose of the article is to systematize a number of scientific works devoted to the conceptualization of the concept of the precariat, which received active theoretical elaboration at the beginning of the XX century. The relevance of the works devoted to the precariat is explained by the speeches of representatives of this social group in European countries at the beginning of the XXI century. One of the tasks of the article is to solve the “black box” G. Standing, which denoted the relationship of the newly formed social group with social processes outlined in the works of P. Bourdieu, J
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Klever, Emma. "Against the Current." Poliarchia 3, no. 5 (2021): 93–131. http://dx.doi.org/10.12797/poliarchia.03.2015.05.05.

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The political reality of the European Union is not reflected in the general discourse on the relationship between Western Europe and Central and Eastern Europe, which is characterized by an adverse attitude towards the latter. This impacts identity construction on the European level, where Central and Eastern Europe has long been regarded as the “Other” against which the European “self ” was defined. However, a new discourse on this relationship has emerged in literary works written by scholars and journalists that are able to take an overarching perspective. The present study analyses four pu
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Babulewicz, Katarzyna Lidia. "Muzyczne reprezentacje przeszłości w dziecięcych filmach animowanych wyprodukowanych w Europie Środkowo- Wschodniej w latach komunizmu." Kwartalnik Młodych Muzykologów UJ, no. 46 (3) (2020): 55–70. http://dx.doi.org/10.4467/23537094kmmuj.20.012.12854.

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Musical Representations of the Past in Animations for Children Produced in Central and Eastern Europe in Times of Communism The subject of the article is the composition strategies of presenting the bygone time in animated films produced in the integrated cultural space that was, during the communist era, Central and Eastern Europe. Productions made in two countries – in the Soviet Union and in Poland – are considered. The discussion of film examples is conducted in an approximate chronological order, according to the time of production of individual pictures. The presentation of specific prod
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Gromko, Bartosz. "Don Francesco Ricci. Duszpasterz obu Europ (1930–1991)." Wolność i Solidarność 15 (2024): 128–39. http://dx.doi.org/10.4467/25434942ws.23.009.19660.

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Francesco Ricci (1930–1991) was an Italian priest, canon of the cathedral of Forli, ecclesiastical assistant of the Communion and Liberation, and rector of the church of San Filippo Neri in Forli. He travelled to many countries to promote Communion and Liberation: Yugoslavia, Peru, Poland, Hungary, Japan and Korea, Uganda, Paraguay, Czechoslovakia, and Brazil. Due to his interest in Eastern Europe, which was then under communist rule, he founded the Center for the Study of Eastern Europe (CSEO) in Forlì, which was dedicated to deepening and spreading knowledge about the countries of this area
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Pelurityte-Tikuisiene, Audinga. "Jak nas czytają za granicą? Ankieta." Czytanie Literatury. Łódzkie Studia Literaturoznawcze, no. 1 (January 1, 2012): 345–53. https://doi.org/10.18778/2299-7458.01.34.

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Audinga Peluritytė-Tikuišienė shows that despite the common history and treating the contemporary Polish culture and language as a bridge to Europe, Lithuanian writers are turning more toward the East. The author herself, when comparing the style reception in different countries of Central and Eastern Europe, notices psychologism, spirituality, anthropocentric and subjective interpretations of works important in Polish literary theory. She especially values the work of Polish neoclassical writers and comparative writings, noting the need for translations into Lithuanian.
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Parkhalina, Tatiana, and S. A. Romanenko. "International relations in Eastern Europe: problems, approaches and research limits." Urgent Problems of Europe, no. 2 (2022): 7–24. http://dx.doi.org/10.31249/ape/2022.02.01.

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The editors of the introduction substantiate the themes, problems,and methodology of the study of the development of international relations in Eastern Europe. The authors justify the chronological framework of the research, the topics and problems, the structure of the materials, the general characteristics of the sources used by the authors, and gives a description of the research methods. The authors' team consists of representatives of various disciplines – historians, internationalists, political scientists, diplomats, working both in research institutes of the Russian Academy of Sciences
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BRANDA, Alina. "Anthropological Perspectives on Romanian Socialism. A Case Study." Territorial Identity and Development 5, no. 1 (2020): 5–20. http://dx.doi.org/10.23740/tid120201.

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This paper aims to analyze mainly how and why Western anthropologists conducted fieldwork in Eastern Europe during the Cold War. What motivated their particular research interest in this part of Europe, how they understood these societies and socialist systems, what specific factors made possible and facilitated the fieldwork they had conducted in difficult times. These are the main research questions addressed in this paper. Specifically, I refer to their work carried out in the 1970s-1980s in Romania. In particular, I aim at analyzing the works of three reputable US specialists in the field,
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Cichocka, Helena. "The Study of Byzantine Rhetoric in Central and Eastern Europe: Selected Problems." Rhetorica 11, no. 1 (1993): 43–50. http://dx.doi.org/10.1525/rh.1993.11.1.43.

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Abstract: This survey of Central and Eastern European scholarship begins by placing rhetoric in relation to poetics and literary theory,then examines work on Byzantine rhetoric within this framework. The most striking feature of this scholarship is its formalistic tendency, which is seen above all in the works of such Russian scholars as S. Averinčev, M. Gasparov, and G. Kurbatov, but the same tendency is also evident in Polish studies on the theory of prose composition.
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Zhukov, Iurii. "Critical assessment of the influence of the USSR on the European countries of the “Socialist camp” in modern Russian historiography." Međunarodne studije 24, no. 1-2 (2024): 157–69. https://doi.org/10.46672/ms.24.1-2.7.

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The paper analyses the work of Russian historians of the 1990s, 2000s and 2010s who demonstrated a critical approach to the analysis and assessment of the influence of Soviet institutions on the countries of Eastern, Southeastern and Central Europe. The works of historians of the 1990s, 2000s and 2010s demonstrate a critical approach to the analysis and assessment of the influence of Soviet institutions on the countries of Eastern, Southeastern and Central Europe. These trends in historiography were an integral part of reflections on the shortcomings of the Soviet system as a whole, and were a
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Sterckx, Jo. "Het beeld van Midden- en Oost-Europa in Nederlandse literaire non-fictie." Werkwinkel 9, no. 1 (2014): 9–22. http://dx.doi.org/10.2478/werk-2014-0001.

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Abstract Over the last 20 years, literary nonfiction has become increasingly popular among the Dutch reading public. Thanks to increasing sales, translations and literary awards the genre achieved a strong position in Dutch literature. This article analyzes the image of Central and Eastern European countries in Dutch literary nonfiction of the last ten years (2004-14). It searches for characteristics of an orientalist and balkanist discourse and the presence of the imagological centre-periphery model in the works of Geert Mak, Jelle Brandt Corstius, Olaf Koens, Joop Verstraten and Jan Brokken.
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Ivanova, O. M., E. A. Guriev, L. M. Bilalova, and I. S. Gareev. "Socio – cultural existence of modern East Mary subethnos." Revista Amazonia Investiga 9, no. 28 (2020): 311–19. http://dx.doi.org/10.34069/ai/2020.28.04.35.

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The article deals with the history, traditions and way of life of sub-ethnic group of the Finno-Ugric tribes –the Eastern Maris, who are considered the "last pagans of Europe". Using specific ethnographic material, scientific and popular-scientific works, the authors showed the unique culture of the Eastern Maris sub-ethnos, pagan beliefs, preserved to date and reflecting people’s social existence, beauty of the traditions and essential national characteristics. The authors draw a conclusion that the Eastern Maris present an independent sub-ethnos tending to self-reproduction. Being amidst the
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Trepte, Hans Christian. "In search of an adequate novel on the democratic changes of 1989/1990. A paradigmatic approach." Wolność i Solidarność 11-12 (2020): 257–66. http://dx.doi.org/10.4467/25434942ws.20.017.15021.

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Literary debates on Central Europe often concern the problems of the democratic breakthrough in the former Eastern bloc. Central Europe is also a common cultural and literary heritage; however, it must be shown how literary visions resonated in specific discussions and literary works in various countries before and after the democratic transformation of 1989/1990. Revolutionary events in Poland resulted in the “Autumn of Nations”, and the expectations of readers and critics for a suitable novel about the breakthrough and transformation process were high.
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Nowicka-Franczak, Magdalena. "Dispositif Analysis in Eastern Europe: The Outline of a Research Program." Przegląd Socjologii Jakościowej 16, no. 4 (2020): 146–69. http://dx.doi.org/10.18778/1733-8069.16.4.08.

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The article discusses uses of dispositif analysis inspired by Michel Foucault’s late works, in a context different from the original one. The author presents the main methodological assumptions of dispositif analysis and the factors which result in its critical and interdisciplinary potential not being fully exploited at present. Based on a literature review of dispositif analysis in post-socialist Eastern Europe, the author formulates an interdisciplinary research program aimed at adapting this approach to the study of East European power networks, taking into account both its different histo
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Saoud, Umesh Singh. "Destabilizing Said’s Notion of Orientalism: A Critical Study of The Travels of Mirza Abu Taleb Khan." Pragyajyoti 5, no. 8 (2024): 180–89. https://doi.org/10.3126/pj.v5i8.73806.

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During the colonial period, many literary works helped the empire create a narrative about the Orient. However, few works describe the West from the perspective of the East. The Travels of Mirza Abu Taleb Khan is one such travelogue, offering a unique view of Europe through the eyes of an Eastern traveler. This paper examines Taleb Khan’s observations and opinions about Europeans and their culture. Using Edward Said’s concept of Orientalism as a framework, the paper argues that Taleb’s travelogue presents an Eastern discourse that challenges Said’s idea of Orientalism. This study contributes t
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Forrester, Sibelan. "From a double margin: Anglophone translation of women's writing from Croatia and Serbia." Reci Beograd 12, no. 13 (2020): 29–41. http://dx.doi.org/10.5937/reci2013029f.

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This article examines Anglophone translations of women's writing from Eastern Europe with particular focus on writers from Croatia and Serbia. After outlining the presences and absences of these women writers in Anglophone translations, it raises some questions about the significance of gender in literary canon formation and the emergence of literary works into a global context through translation.
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Czarzasty, Jan, Sławomir Adamczyk, and Barbara Surdykowska. "Looking for European solutions. Trade unions in Central and Eastern Europe striving for cross-border solidarity." Transfer: European Review of Labour and Research 26, no. 3 (2020): 307–23. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1024258920933117.

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This article deals with the dilemmas faced by trade unions from Central and Eastern Europe (CEE) in the context of their relations with western European (EU-15) unions and the European Trade Union Confederation (ETUC). The issue of cross-border solidarity is re-examined, taking into account its historical meanings as well as current developments under the pressures of globalisation and EU integration. The article analyses key factors affecting East–West trade union relations – different views within the ETUC, discontinuities in European social dialogue, challenges faced by European works counc
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Sodiqov, Qosimjon. "Linguistic terms used in works of the Karakhanid era." Golden Scripts 2 (June 10, 2024): 117–35. http://dx.doi.org/10.52773/tsuull.gold.2024.2/fbph3421.

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As scientific sources testify, early and medieval eastern, in particular, Turkic linguistics were significantly ahead in their development of the level of linguistic knowledge in Europe. This is evidenced by the fact that by this period an integral system of linguistic terms had already been formed in the East, a significant part of which was preserved in written monuments of the Karakhanid period. And what is especially noteworthy is that many of them are of Turkic origin. And in this regard, the merit of linguists, historians and literary figures of this period is invaluable. The lion’s shar
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Fiala, Dalibor, and Lutz Bornmann. "Reference publication year spectroscopy (RPYS) of computer science papers from Eastern Europe." Aslib Journal of Information Management 72, no. 3 (2020): 305–19. http://dx.doi.org/10.1108/ajim-06-2019-0142.

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PurposeThe current article presents the results of a case study dealing with the historical roots of Eastern European researchers in computer science.Design/methodology/approachThe study is based on an analysis of cited references stemming from a collection of around 80,000 computer science papers by Eastern European researchers published from 1989 to 2014. By using a method called “reference publication year spectroscopy” (RPYS) for historical analyses based on bibliometric data, we analyze around 800,000 references cited in those papers. The study identifies the peak years, including most fr
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King, Charles. "Post-Postcommunism: Transition, Comparison, and the End of “Eastern Europe”." World Politics 53, no. 1 (2000): 143–72. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0043887100009400.

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A decade after the end of European and Eurasian communism the once acrimonious debates between “area studies” and “the discipline” have largely subsided. Access to archives, survey data, and political elites has allowed east European countries to be treated as normal arenas of research. Recent work by both younger and established scholars has made serious contributions not only to the understanding of postcommunism but also to broader research questions about the political economy of reform, federalism, transitional justice, and nationalism and interethnic relations. The key issue for students
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Vojinić, Perica, and Marija Bečić. "PLATFORM WORK IN SELECTED COUNTRIES OF EASTERN AND CENTRAL EUROPE." DIEM Dubrovnik International Economic Meeting 9, no. 1 (2024): 97–104. http://dx.doi.org/10.17818/diem/2024/1.14.

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Labour markets are increasingly being organized through digital platforms. These platforms are often characterized by a systematic asymmetry of information and power in favour of platform providers. They rely on an independent workforce that receives low wages and no social security, and at the same time works for its own account and bears the risk independently. Non-standard form of business via digital platforms offers benefits such as more flexible working hours, more favourable prices, and opportunities for income generation, but it also come with challenges related to job stability, benef
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