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Politics, literature and tertium datur : socialist central Europe, 1928-1968 / Ivana Perica.

Bloomsbury Collections: Literary Studies 2025 Available online

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Format:
Book
Author/Creator:
Perica, Ivana, 1984- author.
Language:
English
Subjects (All):
Central European literature--20th century--History and criticism.
Central European literature.
Politics and literature--Europe, Central--History.
Politics and literature.
Comparative literature--Themes, motives.
Comparative literature.
Physical Description:
1 online resource (304 pages) : illustrations
Place of Publication:
New York : Bloomsbury Academic, 2025.
Summary:
"Offers an alternate framing of the literary and political afterlives of revolution between 1928-1968 in Eastern and Western Europe. Politics, Literature and Tertium Datur combines the transfer of ideas between historical turning points with a comparative reading of political literatures in the European East and West to address the disparity between the abundance of scholarly accounts of 1968 and the simultaneous forgetting of developments in the interwar period that peaked around 1928. It deepens scholarly awareness of the transnational spaces of interwar literature and explores their afterlives in the post-World War II period. The book troubles and corrects Western European theories of 1968 by tracing the post-war afterlives of shared interwar experiences that point towards a socialist third way, or Georg Lukács’ tertium datur, and thus out of the conventionally understood East-West binary. It testifies to the existence of a literature that throughout the last century self-consciously oscillated between the exigencies of organized politics and the aesthetic task of helping to shape the humanity of tomorrow. Examining case studies of works by Bertolt Brecht, Ivan Olbracht and August Cesarec among others, Politics, Literature and Tertium Datur excavates a series of problems, optics and styles characteristic of the forgotten episodes of 20th-century literary history. It shows that the proverbial Iron Curtain was not impenetrable, and that the walls and borders erected in the post-war period could not completely suppress the reverberations and revival of projects that flourished in the political-literary metropolises of the interwar period"-- Provided by publisher.
Contents:
What’s in a name? Political literature and the politics of literature
Tropes of conflict and disagreement : Interwar metaphors, post-war metonymies
The interwar r/evolutionary controversy
‘To marry art to the people’ : Viennese hybridity
Revolutionary pulp fiction : Ernst Fischer’s Lenin (1928) and Der große Verrat (The Great Treason, 1950)
‘Literature, too, is a war zone’ : Berlin’s literary communism
The negotiation play : Bertolt Brecht’s Die Maßnahme (The Measures Taken, 1930/1931)
Freedom of art but partisanship of artists : Interwar Prague
Male capital and its female peripheries : Ivan Olbracht’s O Anne, rusé prolétarce (About Anna, the Red Proletarian, 1925-6/1928)
The ‘social literature swindlers’ of Zagreb and Belgrade
A tableau of exiles : August Cesarec’s Bjegunci (The Fugitives, 1933)
Cultural revolutions in the West, East and in-between : tertium datur?
Individualistic anarchism as the vanishing point of the 1968 cultural revolution
The dialectics of and yet : Peter Weiss’s Die Ästhetik des Widerstands (The Aesthetics of Resistance, 1971-81)
Socialism with a human face but without socialist literature? Political and literary dissent around the Prague Spring
Josef Škvorecký’s precursory cynicism : Konec nylonového veku (The End of the Nylon Age, 1967) and Mirákl (The Miracle Game, 1972)
‘Traditions and perspectives’ of Yugoslav 1968
‘The tragic Tartuffe-like existence of the revolutionary’ : Ervin Šinko’s Optimisták (The Optimists, 1954) and Roman jednog romana : Moskovski dnevnik (The Novel of a Novel : Abridged Diary Entries from Moscow, 1935-1937, 1955)
A r/evolutionary synthesis : Georg Lukács’s Die Eigenart des Ästhetischen (The Specificity of the Aesthetic, 1963).
Notes:
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Print version record.
Other Format:
Print version: Perica, Ivana, 1984- Politics, literature and tertium datur
ISBN:
9798765123942
9798765123904
9798765123935
OCLC:
1520506201
Access Restriction:
Restricted for use by site license

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