Библиографски раздел

Кореспондентската мрежа на вестник "Свобода/Независимост" - въобразена и реална география

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  • Summary/Abstract
    Резюме
    The findings presented here are results of a more general research of the “geography” of Svoboda/Nezavisimost Newspaper (1869–1874). The texts under analysis were not only written, but they were also published on the pages of a periodical. Nevertheless these texts are in close relation to the sphere of imagining and the imagined. The topic of imagined texts is more or less inspired by the thesis about the nation as an imagined community. So the problem of the imagined geography calls for a discussion on the way in which certain texts perform an important function in the process of imagining the community, in our case – imagining the Bulgarian nation.

Библиографски раздел

Духът на 1776: Полската и далматинската декларация за философска независимост

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  • Summary/Abstract
    Резюме
    The article compares some texts and cultural phenomena from Eastern Europe or East-Central Europe, which would correlate cultural manifestations in the region with the distant transatlantic developments emphasizing the principle and agenda of national independence. In 1776 Ignacy Krasicki published „what can be called the first Polish novel", The Adventures of Mikolaj Doswiadczynski, Written by Himself (Mikolaja Doswiadczynskiego Przypadki, przez niegoz samego opisane), and Giovanni Lovrich, also known as Ivan Lovric, from Venetian Dalmatia, published in Venice his only literary work, Observations on Various Parts of the Voyage in Dalmatia of Signor Abbé Alberto Fortis (Osservazioni di Giovanni Lovrich sopra diversi pezzi del viaggio in Dalmazia del Signor Abate Alberto Fortis). In the intellectual tensions of the Enlightenment, in its hierarchical rankings and resentments by language and culture, Polish and French, Dalmatian and Italian, it is possible to discern some aspects of national self-assertion, a kindred spirit of 1776, within the literary forms of the ancient regime in its first crisis. Furthermore, the consciousness of foreign domination among Poles and Dalmatians in 1776, in conjunction with a sensitivity to foreign literary condescension, provoked certain common cultural patterns of response, and even some inklings of a regional resemblance that would eventually be summed up in the idea of Eastern Europe.