Archiv für Februar 2014

The Taliban, religious revival and innovation in Afghan nationalism

National Identities, Volume 16, Issue 1, Page 15-30, March 2014.

Regimes of ethnicity and nationhood in Germany, Russia, and Turkey

National Identities, Volume 16, Issue 1, Page 91-93, March 2014.

Race in translation: culture wars around the postcolonial Atlantic

National Identities, Volume 16, Issue 1, Page 93-95, March 2014.

Myth, national identity, and the contemporary tourism site: the case of Amalienborg and Frederiksstaden

National Identities, Volume 16, Issue 1, Page 53-70, March 2014.

The Danish euro: constructing a monetary oxymoron in the Danish euro debate

National Identities, Volume 16, Issue 1, Page 31-51, March 2014.

National identity and cultural resonance in English foxhunting movements

National Identities, Volume 16, Issue 1, Page 71-90, March 2014.

Esprit | 2/2014

Quelle: http://www.eurozine.com/journals/esprit/issue/2014-02-20.html

0075 Iain Boyd Whyte, Nikolaus Pevsner: art history, nation, and exile

In September 1933, Nikolaus Pevsner travelled to England as a refugee from National Socialist Germany. This article investigates Pevsner’s continuing debt at this time to German art history in general, and to […]

The Politics of Arabella : Post-Wagnerian Opera and the German-Jewish Quest for Lyrical Individualism, 1928–1933 *

<span class=“paragraphSection“>The joint artistic project of composer Richard Strauss (1864-1949) and librettist Hugo von Hofmannsthal (1874-1929), which flourished during the turbulent years 1909-1929, resulted in six operas – all won critical resonance and some even gained wide popularity. First staged in Dresden on 26 January 1911, <span style=“font-style:italic;“>Der Rosenkavalier</span> became an immediate hit and opened more than fifty times that year to packed houses – in Dresden as well as in a string of other European cities. Demand for the opera was so great that the Prussian State Railways laid on a special service of <span style=“font-style:italic;“>Rosenkavalier</span> trains to usher the enthusiastic crowds from Berlin to Dresden and its opera house.1<sup>1</sup></span>

NINE PASSAGES OF AESCHYLUS, AGAMEMNON

Research Articles The Classical Quarterly, Volume 63 Issue 02, pp 491-500Abstract