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© Purdue University Press
Steven TOTOSY de ZEPETNEK
Bibliography
for the Study of Central European Culture
The following bibliography published online
is an updated version of Steven Tötösy de Zepetnek, "Selected
Bibliography for the Study of Central European Culture," in Comparative
Central European Culture (Ed. Steven Tötösy de Zepetnek),
Volume 1 in the Purdue University Press series of Books in Comparative
Cultural Studies <http://www.thepress.purdue.edu/series/compstudies.asp>
& <http://clcwebjournal.lib.purdue.edu/ccs-purdue.html>,
West Lafayette: Purdue UP, 2002. 189-206. It is a bibliography for the study
of Central European culture ranging from studies in culture, literature, sociology,
history, economics, architecture, political science, media, the arts, comparative
cultural studies, etc. Central Europe and its culture(s) are understood here
as a real and imagined space from Austria and the former East Germany to Romania
and Bulgaria and Serbia to Galicia in the Ukraine, etc., including the Habsburg
lands and their spheres of influence at various times of history. While the
bibliography is with focus on the period of and after the 1989-1990 collapse
of the Soviet empire and communism, essential studies about previous periods
of the region are included. Although cumulative as well as selected bibliographies
of work in all languages of the region including work published in the major
languages of the West would be best, recognizing the universality of English
as today’s language of research and communication, the studies selected for
this bibliography are mostly English-language publications although selected
seminal studies in German, French, and Italian are included.
After the Fall. Thematic Issue Media Studies Journal
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Ágh, Attila, ed. The Emergence of East Central European
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Altermatt, Urs. Nation, Ethnizität
und Staat in Mitteleuropa. Wien: Böhlau, 1996.Anderson, Benedict.
Imagined Communities: Reflection on the Origin and Spread of Nationalism.
London: Verso, 1991.
Antohi, Sorin, and Vladimir Tismaneanu, eds.
Between Past and Future: The Revolutions of 1989 and Their Aftermath.
Budapest: Central European UP, 2000.
Arens, Katherine. “Politics, History, and Public
Intellectuals in Central Europe after 1989.” Comparative Central European
Culture. Ed. Steven Tötösy de Zepetnek. West Lafayette: Purdue
UP, 2001. 115-32.
Arens, Katherine. “Central Europe and the Nationalist
Paradigm.” Working Papers in Austrian Studies 96.1 (1996): <http://www.cas.umn.edu/wp961.htm>.
Arens, Katherine. Austria and Other Margins:
Reading Culture. Columbia: Camden House, 1996.
Ash, Timothy Garton. History of the Present:
Essays, Sketches, and Dispatches from Europe in the 1990s. New York: Random
House, 2000.
Ash, Timothy Garton. “The Puzzle of Central
Europe.” The New York Review (18 March 1999): 18-23.
Ash, Timothy Garton. The Magic Lantern :
The Revolution of ’89 Witnessed in Warsaw, Budapest, Berlin and Prague.
New York: Vintage, 1993.
Ash, Timothy Garton. The Uses of Adversity:
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Banac, Ivo, ed. Eastern Europe in Revolution.
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Barcsay, Thomas. “Entrepreneurial Traditions
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(1992): 66-81. Baske, Siegfried. “Charakteristika der Entwicklung und der
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(1990): 226-37.
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Berend, Iván T. Decades of Crisis:
Central and Eastern Europe before World War II. Berkeley: U. of California
P, 1998.
Berend, Iván T. Central & Eastern
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Berend, Iván T., and György Ránki.
The European Periphery and Industrialization, 1780–1914. Cambridge:
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