Discourse Beyond Borders: Periodicals, Dissidents, and European Cultural Spaces

Carlos Reijnen
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Émigré periodicals in Cold War Europe have long been considered isolated islands of Central and East European communities with limited relevance. In the second half of the Cold War, some of these periodicals functioned as crucial intersections of communication between dissidents, emigrants and Western European intellectuals. These periodicals were the greenhouses for the development of new definitions of Central Europe, Eastern Europe, and Europe at large. This article studies Cold War émigré periodicals from a spatial perspective and argues that they can be analysed as European cultural spaces. In this approach, European cultural spaces are seen as insular components of a European public sphere. The particular settings (spaces) within which the periodicals developed have contributed greatly to the ideas that they expressed. The specific limits and functions of periodicals such as Kultura or Svědectví [Testimony] have triggered perceptions of Central European and European solidarity. The originally Russian periodical Kontinent promoted an eventually less successful East European-Russian solidarity.  
超越国界的话语:期刊、持不同政见者和欧洲文化空间
Émigré冷战时期欧洲的期刊长期以来被认为是中欧和东欧共同体的孤岛,相关性有限。在冷战后半期,这些期刊中的一些成为了持不同政见者、移民和西欧知识分子之间交流的关键交叉点。这些期刊是发展中欧、东欧和整个欧洲新定义的温室。本文从空间的角度对冷战时期的期刊进行了研究,认为它们可以作为欧洲文化空间来分析。在这种方法中,欧洲文化空间被视为欧洲公共领域的孤立组成部分。期刊发展的特定环境(空间)对它们所表达的思想有很大的贡献。诸如Kultura或Svědectví[证言]等期刊的特定限制和功能引发了中欧和欧洲团结的观念。最初的俄罗斯期刊《大陆》促进了最终不太成功的东欧-俄罗斯团结。
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来源期刊
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