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.
"Die Frau des Jägers", "Gott", "Liebe", "Nachrichten", "Der Untergang der Minotauren", "Tee mit Sahne", Odeon", Translator Valeria Jäger
More...
"Der Zuge der Kinder"; translator Alexander Sitzmann, "Traumseher", "In Articulo Mortis", Valeria Jäger, "Ibidem. Wie sollen wir mit dem Erlernten umgehen", Andrea Jost
More...
Fragment of "Passion or The Dead of Alisa"
More...
Ironic prose about misunderstandings between two friends coming from different parts of Europe. Translation by Valeria Jäger, Vienna
More...
A young scholar, Anna Borgos, finds an unknown and unpublished manuscript in the archive of the Hungarian Academy of Scienses. It is the beginning of an autobiography in which the author, Ilona Harmos, wife of the great Hungarian poet and writer Dezső Kosztolányi, recollects her childhood and youth, depicting the life of a Jewish lower-middle-class family at the turn of the 19th and 20th century and relating the sexual and intellectual 'awakening of spring' of a young girl with an outspokenness unusual in contemporary Hungarian literature. - The selection of the autobiographical novel is situated and analysed by an essay of Anna Borgos.
More...
An old coachbuilder from Transsylvania moves to Budapest, after the war. Coaches are out of date, but he builds the models of all the lavish carriages that he has worked on during his life. When he emigrates to the other end of the world, Australia, the models remain in his small council flat in Budapest. The flat is assigned to a young man in the late seventies. He finds the unclaimed models and makes a big business of the delicate objects. He sells them one by one to a misterious collector and invests the money. By the nineties the characterless young man is a millionaire, the symbol of the new society in Central Europe. He takes the last model to Australia to find the old man and thank him. He finds his grave. On the way back his plane crashes in the Australian bush.
More...
Charles de Tolnay the outstanding art historian of Hungarian origin carried in intensive correspondence with his Hungarian friends and significant contemporaries. The letters (the estate) is preserved in the Casa Buonarotti, we are to publish them in three parts. In this present issue we publish the letters written by Carl Mannheim (1893-1947) (also of Hungarian origin) to Charles de Tolnay. The correspondenece gives additional material to the subject of the scientific carreer-possibilities between the two world wars.
More...
"The party of humanity" (an interpretation of Hume's Principles of Morals): the second chapter of a monography about the connection of political philosophy and the theory of language in the XVIIth and XVIIIth centuries' British and French Enlightenment. It is an analysis of Hume's emotivism and universalism in political philosophy, and the theory of language as paradigm of both.
More...
Plus, Belarusian ‘press freedom’ means release from jail and Kazakhs hand down terror plot sentences. Around the Bloc is TOL's daily digest of the important, the trivial, the tragic, the weird, and the sober from its coverage region.
More...
Plus, who gets the blame for letting thousands of Czech convicts free and a poor Latvian town looks to Rothko for a boost. Around the Bloc is TOL's daily digest of the important, the trivial, the tragic, the weird, and the sober from its coverage region.
More...
Plus, protests and anger on this Labor Day, and presidential grants in Armenia go to shadowy groups. Around the Bloc is TOL's daily digest of the important, the trivial, the tragic, the weird, and the sober from its coverage region.
More...
A proposed new law has Moldova’s Russian speakers fearing the end of bilingualism, while members of other ethnic groups worry they could lose their languages entirely.
More...