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Träfflista för sökning "WFRF:(Sarsenov Karin) "

Search: WFRF:(Sarsenov Karin)

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1.
  • Sarsenov, Karin, et al. (author)
  • Introduction to "The Oeuvre of Nina Sadur"
  • 2005
  • In: The Oeuvre of Nina Sadur.
  • Book chapter (other academic/artistic)abstract
    • The article presents Nina Sadur's artistic biography, connecting important events in her life to key passages in her texts. The article is based on recorded interview material, published criticism and a reading of her oeuvre.
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2.
  • Sarsenov, Karin, et al. (author)
  • Sadur and Madness: Problems of Representation
  • 2005
  • In: The Oeuvre of Nina Sadur.
  • Book chapter (other academic/artistic)abstract
    • The article investigates the problem of reperesentating women's madness, based on analyses of works by Nina Sadur ("The Garden", "The South", "The Nose", "A Girl at Night").
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  • Dutceac Segesten, Anamaria, et al. (author)
  • The Post-Communist Afterlife of Dissidents: The Case of Herta Müller
  • 2013
  • In: Imagining Mass Dictatorships: The Individual and the Masses in Literature and Cinema. - 9781137330680 ; , s. 28-51
  • Book chapter (peer-reviewed)abstract
    • This chapter explores the role of the dissident intellectual in the post-dictatorship era. More specifically, it looks at the reaction in the Romanian cultural press and in the daily newspapers to the awarding of the 2009 Nobel Prize in Literature to Herta Müller, a Romanian-born German writer. Müller is known for her anti-Communist stance as well as her critique of those Romanian political and intellectual elites judged too shy in distancing themselves from the Communist past. I would suggest that the ambivalent attitude of the media towards Müller’s prize reflects the hesitation of both the public and elite to critically engage with the recent past. The effectiveness of Müller’s intransigent attitude is also questioned, that is, more broadly, whether former anti-Communist dissidents are still in a position to mobilize interest and reaction in the aftermath of authoritarian regimes.
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  • Imagining Mass Dictatorships : The Individual and the Masses in Literature and Cinema
  • 2013
  • Editorial collection (peer-reviewed)abstract
    • This volume in the series 'Mass Dictatorship in the Twentieth Century' sees twelve Swedish, Korean and Japanese scholars, theorists, and historians of fiction and non-fiction probe the literary subject of life in 20th century mass dictatorships. Generously defined, the 'literary' in this context covers a wide spectrum of narrative forms, ranging from the commercial television documentary to popular crime fiction, and from digitally restored amateur film on DVD to the Nobel Prize winning novel. It deals with mass dictatorship regimes as far apart as Nazi Germany, Park Chung-hee's South Korea, Stalinist Russia, post-war Hungary, Mao Zedong's China, apartheid's South Africa, and Ceausescu's Romania. The interplay of analytical ideas and the transnational perspectives that this volume brings add a new dimension to our understanding of traumatic events – 'dark chapters' – in 20th century history. By focusing the immense role of imagination within a cultural discourse otherwise dominated by irrefutable facts such as the existence of Holocaust and Gulag, this volume opens new ways of thinking perceptively about trauma, power and self.
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  • Result 1-10 of 43

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