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Central and Eastern European Literary Theory and the West / ed. by Michał Mrugalski, Schamma Schahadat, Irina Wutsdorff.

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Format:
Book
Contributor:
Ambros, Veronika, Contributor.
Bird, Robert, Contributor.
Brandist, Craig, Contributor.
Brzostowska-Tereszkiewicz, Tamara, Contributor.
Drews-Sylla, Gesine, Contributor.
Flack, Patrick, Contributor.
Glanc, Tomáš, Contributor.
Grübel, Rainer Georg, Contributor.
Hirschkop, Ken, Contributor.
Lachmann, Renate, Contributor.
Magnone, Lena, Contributor.
Martin, Erik, Contributor.
Merrill, Jessica, Contributor.
Mrugalski, Michał, Contributor.
Mrugalski, Michał, Editor.
Nebrig, Alexander, Contributor.
Peschanskyi, Valentin, Contributor.
Pilshchikov, Igor, Contributor.
Plotnikov, Nikolaj, Contributor.
Robinson, Josh, Contributor.
Sadzik, Piotr, Contributor.
Sasse, Sylvia, Contributor.
Schahadat, Schamma, Contributor.
Schahadat, Schamma, Editor.
Steiner, Peter, Contributor.
Stiegler, Bernd, Contributor.
Strätling, Susanne, Contributor.
Tava, Francesco, Contributor.
Tchougounnikov, Serge, Contributor.
Tihanov, Galin, Contributor.
Uffelmann, Dirk, Contributor.
Ulicka, Danuta, Contributor.
Vojvodík, Josef, Contributor.
Wutsdorff, Irina, Contributor.
Wutsdorff, Irina, Editor.
Zherebin, Alekseĭ, Contributor.
Series:
De Gruyter Reference Series
De Gruyter Reference
Language:
English
Physical Description:
1 online resource (VIII, 961 p.)
Edition:
1st ed.
Place of Publication:
Berlin ; Boston : De Gruyter, [2022]
Language Note:
In English.
Summary:
Literary theory flourished in Central and Eastern Europe throughout the twentieth century, but its relation to Western literary scholarship is complex. This book sheds light on the entangled histories of exchange and influence both within the region known as Central and Eastern Europe, and between the region and the West. The exchange of ideas between scholars in the East and West was facilitated by both personal and institutional relations, both official and informal encounters. For the longest time, however, intellectual exchange was thwarted by political tensions that led to large parts of Central and Eastern Europe being isolated from the West. A few literary theories nevertheless made it into Western scholarly discourses via exiled scholars. Some of these scholars, such as Mikhail Bakhtin, become widely known in the West and their thought was transposed onto new, Western cultural contexts; others, such as Ol’ga Freidenberg, were barely noticed outside of Russian and Poland. This volume draws attention to the schools, circles, and concepts that shaped the development of theory in Central and Eastern Europe as well as the histoire croisée – the history of translations, transformations, and migrations – that conditioned its relationship with the West.
Contents:
Frontmatter
Table of Contents
I Introduction: Entangled Literary Theory
Introduction
The Migration of Concepts
Translation of Theories – Theories of Translation
Migrants of Theory
Spaces of Theory
A Case Study of a Migrating Term: Intertextuality
II Formations of Literary Theory: Schools and Institutions, Concepts and Methods
II.1 Institutions of Interdisciplinary Research from the 1910s until the 1930s
Journal and Society of Aesthetics and the General Science of Art
Institute of the History of the Arts
The Institute for the Comparative History of the Literatures and Languages of the West and East (ILIaZV)
The State Academy of Art Studies in Moscow (RAKhN/GAKhN)
II.2 Formalism in Russia, Poland, Bohemia, and Germany
Formalism in Germany
Herbartian Aesthetics in Bohemia
The Four Faces of Russian Formalism
Formalism in Poland
Jurij Striedter’s Reading of Russian Formalism
The North American Reception of Russian Formalism
II.3 Phenomenology in German-speaking Areas, Russia, Czechoslovakia, and Poland
Phenomenology in German-Speaking Areas and in Russia
Phenomenology in Czechoslovakia (Jan Patočka, Přemysl Blažíček)
Phenomenology in Poland
II.4 Hermeneutics
Hermeneutics in Russia
Hermeneutics in the Czech Context (F. X. Šalda, Václav Černý, and Dimitrij Tschižewskij [Dmytro Chyzhevsky])
Poetics and Hermeneutics
II.5 Psychoanalysis and Literature and the Psychology of Art
The Psychologisation of the Central and Eastern European Humanities: Mechanisms and Consequences of the Psychological Turn
Psychoanalysis and Literature and the Psychology of Art (C. G. Jung’s Archaic Images and the Russian Jungians)
Psychoanalysis and Literature in Poland
‘Aesthetic Reaction’ and ‘Verbal Reaction’: Reader-response Criticism from Vygotskii to Voloshinov
II.6 Sociological and Marxist Theory
Realism and Modernism, Aesthetics and Politics: Lukács, Brecht, Adorno
Sociological and Marxist Literary Theory in Colonial Context
Marxism in Poland
II.7 Walter Benjamin and the Frankfurt School
Siegfried Kracauer and Walter Benjamin. Precursors of the Frankfurt School in Transference with the Slavic Body of Thought
Tragic Realism: On Karel Kosík’s Insights into Kafka
II.8 Bakhtin, Bakhtin Circles and the (Re)Discovery of Bakhtin in the West
Bakhtin Circles
Bakhtin’s Philosophy of Literature and its Relation to Literary Theory, Literature and Culture
The (Re)discovery of Bakhtin in Anglophone Criticism
II.9 Structuralism and Semiotics
Transfer as the Key: Understanding the Intellectual History of the Relationship between Formalism and Structuralism from the Perspective of the Prague Linguistic Circle
Approaches to an Anthropologically- Oriented Theory of Literature and Culture in the Czech Avant-Garde and the Aesthetics of Prague Structuralism
Semiotics of Drama and Theatre: The Prague School Model
Structuralism and Semiotics in Poland
Russian Structuralism and Semiotics in Literary Criticism and its Reception
III Beyond Literary Theory
Semantic Paleontology and Its Impact
Postcolonial Studies: Processes of Appropriation and Axiological Controversies
From Literary Theory to Cultural Studies
Russian Theory in Africa: From Marxism to the Bakhtinian Postcolony
Translation Studies (From Theories of Literary Translation to a Paradigm of Modernity)
The Eastern European Origins of the Contemporary Activist Humanities: The Tragic Template of Socialist Kantianism at the Turn of the Twentieth Century
IV Some Key Terms
Alienation/Defamiliarisation/Estrangement (ostranenie)
Carnival, Carnivalism and Bakhtin’s Culture of Laughter
Function
Hybridity
Indeterminacy and Concretization
Literary Evolution
Montage
Novoe zrenie / Neues Sehen / New Vision
Theatricality
Contributors
Index of Names
Notes:
Description based on online resource; title from PDF title page (publisher's Web site, viewed 01. Dez 2022)
This eBook is made available Open Access under a CC BY-NC-ND 4.0 license: https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0 https://www.degruyter.com/dg/page/open-access-policy
ISBN:
9783110400304
3110400308
OCLC:
1353269296
Access Restriction:
Open access Unrestricted online access

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