Общо годишно събрание на 27 юни 1937 г.: Доклади за избор на нови действителни и дописни членове: Йордан Захариев
Presentation of new members’ biographies and scientific work, including selected or full bibliography
More...We kindly inform you that, as long as the subject affiliation of our 300.000+ articles is in progress, you might get unsufficient or no results on your third level or second level search. In this case, please broaden your search criteria.
Presentation of new members’ biographies and scientific work, including selected or full bibliography
More...
Full bibliography of all publications received and catalogued in the library
More...
Full bibliography of all publications received and catalogued in the library
More...
Presentation of new members’ biographies and scientific work, including selected or full bibliography
More...
Presentation of new members’ biographies and scientific work, including selected or full bibliography
More...
Given the prominent position in the Croatian cultural imagination of Vlaho Bukovac’s 1895 painting of the Illyrian Movement, this article argues that the later accounts of early to mid- 19th-century Illyrian politics and literature remain contaminated, and structurally so, by Bukovac’s treatment of the visual. This visual contaminant then points to more general political and cultural practices in Austria-Hungary at the time, including psychoanalysis, not least where psychoanalysis addresses the scope of image and the phantasmatic. Analyzing three paintings where Bukovac takes up the subject of literature cum the phantasmatic alongside Freud’s 1908 study of „Der Dichter und das Phantasieren”, I propose that in both literature serves to indicate the political logic of metonymy or the metonymic logic of the political; furthermore, I show that Freud, unlike Bukovac, fails to sustain this logic precisely in places where he sets out to classify wishes.
More...
Dubravko Mataković ( born in Ivankovo, 20 August 1959) is a Croatian comic strip author of postmode-poetics: heroes of his comic book stories are actually victims of the “big history”, but they are also heroes of their small environments, which have been so ruthlessly polluted by authoritarian powers. Being social caricatures, they are paraphrases and parodies of Heroes from different film, literary, comic-book, and even political-historic Narratives originating from around the world. Mataković makes fun of the Big History as well as of the concept of Authority, and so his Small Heroes, with their absurd ventures, are not ridiculed beings, but rather punk subjects. They have emerged from the worn-out patterns of Power, emerged from the history that strove to contaminate the subject through the whole arsenal of neocolonial arrogance. They have appeared as errors in the civilisation’s code, but these errors are shown by Mataković as our oversight rather than their own incongruence. In terms of drawing, Mataković follows the Jacovitti tradition, his frames are poetically figuratively neo-realistically overflowing, he reacts to the mass media noise and its illiterate preference for emphasis, he is a genius of black humour where hardly anything is funny – it is hysterically funny, but also cumulatively neo-humanistic in a demobilizing way.
More...
From the last third of the 19th century until 1945 Czech scholars have played a substantial part in informing the Bulgarian public about the Sorbs, as well as arousing the interest of Bulgarian Slavists in the subject. One of them was the Czech mathematician, translator and journalist, Vladislav Šak (1860-1941), who, in addition to a number of articles on the subject, published in 1907 in Sofia a popular scientific book under the title “Лужицките сърби” (Lusatian Sorbs). Even before the First World War a number of Bulgarian historians and Slavists published essays and treatises about the Sorbs in Bulgarian periodicals. The three brothers, Stefan, Nikola and Ilija Savov Bobčev were especially prominent in this respect. In the inter-war period it was above all the works of the Czech Slavist and Sorbian specialist, Josef Páta (1886–1942), that were published in Bulgarian. St Ognjanov translated Páta’s monograph, “Lužice” (1919) into Bulgarian. This broad survey of Lusatia and the Sorbs appeared in 1924. Over the following years the Slavist Boris Jocov, the Germanist Dorič and the brothers Bobčev translated further works by Páta into Bulgarian and also published their own works on Sorbian topics.
More...