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Berlin, the City of Saturated Walls

Berlin, the City of Saturated Walls

Author(s): Natalia Samutina,Oksana Zaporozhets / Language(s): English Issue: 2/2015

“Saturation” is the term suggested by the authors to describe the present state of the visual environment of Berlin, the city that acquired a reputation as the European capital of street art. Saturation is a consequence of the gradual infiltration of graffiti and street art into everyday life and the visual environment of Berlin, and their acceptance by city residents. Berliners’ fondness for street imagery is enhanced by the experience and memory of the independent reappropriation and rearrangement of urban space the city underwent after unification. The memory of the Berlin Wall plays a significant role in sustaining Berlin graffiti and street art cultures. It makes evident the history of the images and their creators and their role in urban communication. Simultaneously it normalizes the ephemerality of street imagery. Visual saturation in Berlin is complemented by the activities of “mediators,” who draw various audiences’ attention to graffiti and street art and encourage the interaction of all interested parties.

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Artists’ Books as a Means of Cross-Cultural Transfer
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Artists’ Books as a Means of Cross-Cultural Transfer

Author(s): Vassilena Kolarova / Language(s): English Issue: 2/2022

The article studies the artist's books of some of the most famous writers and painters of our time George Badin and Michel Butor.

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Tantiemy dla współtwórców utworu audiowizualnego w kontekście usług platform streamingowych oraz dyrektywy w sprawie prawa autorskiego na jednolitym rynku cyfrowym

Tantiemy dla współtwórców utworu audiowizualnego w kontekście usług platform streamingowych oraz dyrektywy w sprawie prawa autorskiego na jednolitym rynku cyfrowym

Author(s): Iga Bałos / Language(s): Polish Issue: 2/2023

The aim of the article is to present the nature of remuneration due to film co-authors and performers on the basis of Art. 70(2)(1) of the Act of February 4, 1994 on copyright and related rights (CRRA). The current wording of the provision does not take into account the realities of the contemporary audiovisual industry and changing habits of audience who give up cinema screenings in favor of VoD. The streaming services also replace usage of films stored on DVD or other carriers. According to Article 18 of Directive (EU) 2019/790 of the European Parliament and of the Council of 17 April 2019 on copyright and related rights in the digital single market, the Member Stated shall ensure that where authors and performers license or transfer their exclusive rights for the exploitation of their works or other subject matter, they are entitled to receive appropriate and proportionate remuneration. According to the author of this article, the said article, with respect to coauthors of an audiovisual work should be implemented by extending the scope of Art. 70(2)(1) of the CRRA by introducing an inalienable right to appropriate remuneration for making the work publicly available in such a manner that anyone could access it at a place and time individually selected by them.

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Photographs
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Photographs

Author(s): Not Specified Author / Language(s): English,Russian Issue: 1/1982

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Fotografie Alfreda Silkiewicza ze zbioru Karola Lanckorońskiego wykonane z okazji wizyty arcyksięcia Rudolfa w Tarnopolu jako przykład materiałów źródłowych do badań dziejów Galicji i jej mieszkańców

Fotografie Alfreda Silkiewicza ze zbioru Karola Lanckorońskiego wykonane z okazji wizyty arcyksięcia Rudolfa w Tarnopolu jako przykład materiałów źródłowych do badań dziejów Galicji i jej mieszkańców

Author(s): Adam Korczyński,Ewa Skotniczna / Language(s): Polish Issue: 1/2023

In 1929 Karol Lanckoroński (1848–1933) donated his collection of scientific photographs to the Polish Academy of Arts and Sciences. Among the photographs of works of art and archeological relics in that collection we can also find prints of ethnographic nature, including photographs by Alfred Silkiewicz, a photographer with connections in Ternopil. On 6 July 1887 the heir to the throne Archduke Rudolph visited Ternopil and saw an ethnographic exhibition designed specially for his visit in the municipal garden. The central figures of the exhibition were residents of minor towns of Eastern Galicia brought to Ternopil, dressed in regional costumes. The text focuses on the circumstances of taking those photographs and on their significance as a source for researching the history of Galicia and its residents.

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Елементи от традиционния музикален театър в ариите на оригиналните китайски опери

Елементи от традиционния музикален театър в ариите на оригиналните китайски опери

Author(s): Jiangzi Jiang / Language(s): Bulgarian Issue: 15/2024

“The White-Haired Girl“ is the first original Chinese opera. It combines Western music, music from regional Chinese music dramas and Chinese folk music. In this sense, “The White-Haired Girl“ has very high research value. One of the most brilliant vocal performances in the opera is the protagonist's aria “Hate like a mountain, anger like a sea”, which incorporates musical elements from the regional musical theatre of Shanxi province. In this paper, the aria is analyzed in terms of its musical nature, the features of vocal line and emotional expressiveness, the use of elements from Chinese musical theater in operatic arias is explored, and its significance and influence on the creation of opera on local soil is examined.

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ИЗЛОЖБАТА „ПОСОКА СЕВЕР“ ИЛИ КАК ДА ЗАПОЧНЕМ ВСИЧКО ОТНАЧАЛО

ИЗЛОЖБАТА „ПОСОКА СЕВЕР“ ИЛИ КАК ДА ЗАПОЧНЕМ ВСИЧКО ОТНАЧАЛО

Author(s): Nia Tabakova / Language(s): Bulgarian Issue: 19/2021

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НАРОДНИТЕ ОБИЧАИ ПРЕЗ ПОГЛЕДА НА БЪЛГАРСКИЯ ХУДОЖНИК ОТ 20-ТЕ ГОДИНИ НА ХХ В.
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НАРОДНИТЕ ОБИЧАИ ПРЕЗ ПОГЛЕДА НА БЪЛГАРСКИЯ ХУДОЖНИК ОТ 20-ТЕ ГОДИНИ НА ХХ В.

Author(s): Ivo Raykov / Language(s): Bulgarian Issue: 23/2024

The decade of the 1920s was undoubtedly reproductive for Bulgarian fine art in many ways. Having returned from abroad and “immersed” in European culture, many Bulgarian artists bring to their homeland the courage to create new and supranational art. Experiencing the ferocity of the First World War, many of the same artists who had been mobilized to the front line, in the following decade of the 1920s, turned their attention to the “native,” creating a much-needed consolidation of community in times of national disaster. In addition to the transformation of folklore myths and legends, characteristic of the symbolism in Bulgarian art, the study of the “native” also develops in the consideration of traditional folk customs, looking into the life and the celebration of the Bulgarian village, which is increasingly losing its national image – to replace the leotard with a balton and the breeches with trousers and become part of the society of modern Europe. Many artists capture in their paintings the disappearing images of lazarki, the “Butterfly” custom, kukeri, koledari, survakari, weddings and other moments of the Bulgarian ritual calendar.The present work traces both the ethnogenesis of the customs depicted in the paintings, as well as the specifics of their reification, the specifics of the folklore area to which they belong, and their reflections on the idea of “native art” both from the 1920s and in the next decade, when the look at folklore-ethnographic imagery pays attention to different accents, but always in search of the national tradition.

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Fluidity of Image (Photo)Montage in Cultural and Artistic Contexts of the Time

Fluidity of Image (Photo)Montage in Cultural and Artistic Contexts of the Time

Author(s): Jozef Sedlák,Kristína Svítok Mayerová / Language(s): English Issue: 2/2024

The paper explores the fluidity of (photo)montage in image in the cultural contexts of the times, emphasizing the uniqueness of the medium of photography and its ability to transpose the referent as opposed to reality. The text analyses the dialectic between technical mistakes and creative processes that lead to the emergence of new artistic categories and practices. It provokes a discussion on how photography challenges the image. Meanwhile, the processes of spontaneous errors are being examined, including double exposure or accidentally botched photographs for example, that contribute to new forms of artistic interpretation and experimentation. The topic of the imaginative is present throughout the article, from Husserl’s phenomenology to Dadaism and Surrealism, with an emphasis on the transformation of dream images and their interpretation. The component of authenticity in montage and photomontage is emphasized, including how these techniques create new visual identities. The text uses theoretical takes of major thinkers such as Roland Barthes to open up a broader discussion on the ontology of the image and its interpretation, providing a comprehensive view of the transformation and significance of photography in modern art.

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Creative Creatures: Between Art and Anthropology

Creative Creatures: Between Art and Anthropology

Author(s): Katarína Slobodová Nováková,Veronika Majdáková,Martina Pavlíková,Aleš Smrčka / Language(s): English Issue: 2/2024

The visual capture of the world has been an integral part of the formation of ethnology and cultural anthropology since the beginning. It meant not only a source of knowledge of the local community, but especially of the time at which it was created. Sometimes photographs were taken accidentally during research trips as more or less documentary material, which were only superficially analysed and served to visually confirm the investigated state, or were a targeted photo documentation of disappearing phenomena, objects of material culture, ceremonies or genius loci of the researched area. At other times, photographs were created as a result of purposeful research and documentation of selected phenomena. The result of this is an interpretive openness and an effort to find and establish new analytical and interpretive processes that would be able to convey anthropological knowledge more effectively. Is art, or in our specific case artistic photography, usable for research or for interpretation of cultural or anthropological phenomena? We try to find an answer to this question by analysing the collection of photographs of the Creative Creatures project (subtitled Last Survivors) from Papua New Guinea, by art photographer Martin Machaj. We analyse not only its artistic rendering but also the ethnological, anthropological content and message of the work of art.

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ПУБЛИКАЦИННА ДЕЙНОСТ 2020. НАЦИОНАЛНА АКАДЕМИЯ ЗА ТЕАТРАЛНО И ФИЛМОВО ИЗКУСТВО „КРЪСТЬО САРАФОВ“. София

ПУБЛИКАЦИННА ДЕЙНОСТ 2020. НАЦИОНАЛНА АКАДЕМИЯ ЗА ТЕАТРАЛНО И ФИЛМОВО ИЗКУСТВО „КРЪСТЬО САРАФОВ“. София

Author(s): Author Not Specified / Language(s): Bulgarian,Miscellaneous languages Issue: 1/2020

Bulletin “Publication Activity” contains bibliographic information on publications by NATFA lecturers for a calendar year. The publication contains monographs, publications in world databases, publications in specific world databases, publications in the database of the National Reference List of NACID; Publications in databases of publications specific to the field: Culture, Literary Gazette, national media for culture; publications in scientific collections and in non-refereed publications; publications in foreign publications.

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БЮЛЕТИН НА НАТФИЗ. ХУДОЖЕСТВЕНО-ТВОРЧЕСКА ДЕЙНОСТ 2023. НАЦИОНАЛНА АКАДЕМИЯ ЗА ТЕАТРАЛНО И ФИЛМОВО ИЗКУСТВО „КРЪСТЬО САРАФОВ“. София

БЮЛЕТИН НА НАТФИЗ. ХУДОЖЕСТВЕНО-ТВОРЧЕСКА ДЕЙНОСТ 2023. НАЦИОНАЛНА АКАДЕМИЯ ЗА ТЕАТРАЛНО И ФИЛМОВО ИЗКУСТВО „КРЪСТЬО САРАФОВ“. София

Author(s): Author Not Specified / Language(s): Bulgarian,Miscellaneous languages Issue: 1/2023

Bulletin "Artistic and creative activity" contains information about the artistic and creative activity of the teachers of NATFA in several categories: Realized author's product in the field of arts (film, performance, exhibition, concert, etc.); Leading (independent) creative expression in the field of arts; Realized short author's product in the field of arts; Supporting creative expression or participation in a collective product in the field of arts; Leadership of a master class, studio or workshop in the field of arts; Creative expression in a master class, studio or workshop in the field of arts; Awards in competitions for creativity and performance, given by national professional forums and organizations.

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БЮЛЕТИН НА НАТФИЗ. ХУДОЖЕСТВЕНО-ТВОРЧЕСКА ДЕЙНОСТ 2022. НАЦИОНАЛНА АКАДЕМИЯ ЗА ТЕАТРАЛНО И ФИЛМОВО ИЗКУСТВО „КРЪСТЬО САРАФОВ“. София

БЮЛЕТИН НА НАТФИЗ. ХУДОЖЕСТВЕНО-ТВОРЧЕСКА ДЕЙНОСТ 2022. НАЦИОНАЛНА АКАДЕМИЯ ЗА ТЕАТРАЛНО И ФИЛМОВО ИЗКУСТВО „КРЪСТЬО САРАФОВ“. София

Author(s): Author Not Specified / Language(s): Bulgarian,Miscellaneous languages Issue: 1/2022

Bulletin "Artistic and creative activity" contains information about the artistic and creative activity of the teachers of NATFA in several categories: Realized author's product in the field of arts (film, performance, exhibition, concert, etc.); Leading (independent) creative expression in the field of arts; Realized short author's product in the field of arts; Supporting creative expression or participation in a collective product in the field of arts; Leadership of a master class, studio or workshop in the field of arts; Creative expression in a master class, studio or workshop in the field of arts; Awards in competitions for creativity and performance, given by national professional forums and organizations.

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БЮЛЕТИН НА НАТФИЗ. ХУДОЖЕСТВЕНО-ТВОРЧЕСКА ДЕЙНОСТ 2021. НАЦИОНАЛНА АКАДЕМИЯ ЗА ТЕАТРАЛНО И ФИЛМОВО ИЗКУСТВО „КРЪСТЬО САРАФОВ“. София

БЮЛЕТИН НА НАТФИЗ. ХУДОЖЕСТВЕНО-ТВОРЧЕСКА ДЕЙНОСТ 2021. НАЦИОНАЛНА АКАДЕМИЯ ЗА ТЕАТРАЛНО И ФИЛМОВО ИЗКУСТВО „КРЪСТЬО САРАФОВ“. София

Author(s): Author Not Specified / Language(s): Bulgarian,Miscellaneous languages Issue: 1/2021

Bulletin "Artistic and creative activity" contains information about the artistic and creative activity of the teachers of NATFA in several categories: Realized author's product in the field of arts (film, performance, exhibition, concert, etc.); Leading (independent) creative expression in the field of arts; Realized short author's product in the field of arts; Supporting creative expression or participation in a collective product in the field of arts; Leadership of a master class, studio or workshop in the field of arts; Creative expression in a master class, studio or workshop in the field of arts; Awards in competitions for creativity and performance, given by national professional forums and organizations.

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БЮЛЕТИН НА НАТФИЗ. ХУДОЖЕСТВЕНО-ТВОРЧЕСКА ДЕЙНОСТ 2020. НАЦИОНАЛНА АКАДЕМИЯ ЗА ТЕАТРАЛНО И ФИЛМОВО ИЗКУСТВО „КРЪСТЬО САРАФОВ“. София

БЮЛЕТИН НА НАТФИЗ. ХУДОЖЕСТВЕНО-ТВОРЧЕСКА ДЕЙНОСТ 2020. НАЦИОНАЛНА АКАДЕМИЯ ЗА ТЕАТРАЛНО И ФИЛМОВО ИЗКУСТВО „КРЪСТЬО САРАФОВ“. София

Author(s): Author Not Specified / Language(s): Bulgarian,Miscellaneous languages Issue: 1/2020

Bulletin "Artistic and creative activity" contains information about the artistic and creative activity of the teachers of NATFA in several categories: Realized author's product in the field of arts (film, performance, exhibition, concert, etc.); Leading (independent) creative expression in the field of arts; Realized short author's product in the field of arts; Supporting creative expression or participation in a collective product in the field of arts; Leadership of a master class, studio or workshop in the field of arts; Creative expression in a master class, studio or workshop in the field of arts; Awards in competitions for creativity and performance, given by national professional forums and organizations.

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БЮЛЕТИН НА НАТФИЗ. ХУДОЖЕСТВЕНО-ТВОРЧЕСКА ДЕЙНОСТ 2019. НАЦИОНАЛНА АКАДЕМИЯ ЗА ТЕАТРАЛНО И ФИЛМОВО ИЗКУСТВО „КРЪСТЬО САРАФОВ“. София

БЮЛЕТИН НА НАТФИЗ. ХУДОЖЕСТВЕНО-ТВОРЧЕСКА ДЕЙНОСТ 2019. НАЦИОНАЛНА АКАДЕМИЯ ЗА ТЕАТРАЛНО И ФИЛМОВО ИЗКУСТВО „КРЪСТЬО САРАФОВ“. София

Author(s): Author Not Specified / Language(s): Bulgarian,Miscellaneous languages Issue: 1/2019

Bulletin "Artistic and creative activity" contains information about the artistic and creative activity of the teachers of NATFA in several categories: Realized author's product in the field of arts (film, performance, exhibition, concert, etc.); Leading (independent) creative expression in the field of arts; Realized short author's product in the field of arts; Supporting creative expression or participation in a collective product in the field of arts; Leadership of a master class, studio or workshop in the field of arts; Creative expression in a master class, studio or workshop in the field of arts; Awards in competitions for creativity and performance, given by national professional forums and organizations.

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Kanarbikurahvas: metafoorsed mõttemustrid ja loodussuhete ümbermodelleerimine Jaan Kaplinski loomingu näitel
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Kanarbikurahvas: metafoorsed mõttemustrid ja loodussuhete ümbermodelleerimine Jaan Kaplinski loomingu näitel

Author(s): Timo Maran / Language(s): Estonian Issue: 03+04/2024

There can be no doubt that the most important challenge facing humanity in the 21st century is reacting to the manifestations of the global environmental crisis. Culture plays a central role in transitioning to a sustainable society, for it is culture that can show humanity the possibility of different ways of life, meanings and values. An important mission of environmental humanities and ecocriticism today is describing the potential of cultural texts to bring about an ecological breakthrough and facilitate change. There are many works in different genres and styles that depict the natural environment, various species, human relations with nature and environmental problems: these topics have been particularly highlighted since the emergence of ecocriticism in the 1970s. Besides literature, vigorous trends in photography and film, visual arts and theatre involve nature and the environment. This article discusses the deep structures of artistic texts that may have the potential to change humans’ relationship with the environment. I will discuss the work of the Estonian author Jaan Kaplinski (1941–2021) and describe figurative patterns of thought that create metaphoric links between humans and animals, or humans and the environment. On the basis of existing studies, it can be suggested that what is required to bring about cultural change is the circulation of numerous nature representations in texts of various types, and audiences’ exposure to them. However, our knowledge of the characteristics of artistic texts that can change human attitudes is insufficient. What are the structural, stylistic and narrative characteristics that can make a text effective and lead the audience to the critical evaluation of their own environmental impact? For instance, where is the reading experience of nature essays located in the human semiosphere as a whole? Human relations with nature do not simply become manifest in culture; they need to be mediated by signs, texts and thought models in order to be effective. Nature-culture cannot be advanced just by imagining the disappearance of the boundary between culture and nature, as these are semiotic systems that operate on different levels of complexity. While the semiotician Juri Lotman describes the boundary of culture as a translational membrane between the sphere of culture and external environment, the issue here lies in determining the characteristics of the membrane. A possible way in which texts of nature writing could transform human evaluations and behaviour can be found in the convergence of cognitive linguistics and literary criticism. Since the 1970s cognitive linguistics has dealt with conceptual metaphors: figures of speech that organise thinking and help us understand complex and abstract phenomena by creating relations of similarity with simpler and perceptual phenomena. Conceptual metaphors are considered significant in human cognitive development and learning, as using them can lead to changes in the conceptual structures of thinking. An intriguing type of metaphor used in literary texts is the extended metaphor, or sustained metaphor. Extended metaphors not only appear in particular expressions, as is the case with linguistic or conceptual metaphors, but also in literary texts containing such elements considered as wholes. It has been pointed out that literary texts representing nature, the environment and non-human species contain many metaphoric patterns of thought. Starting in the 1970s, links between culture and nature, as well as ecological problems, were recurring topics in Jaan Kaplinski’s work. Yet his ecological views did not fall into a carefully composed logical system, but were rather concentrated around figurative cores of thought: heather, extinction, the amber pine, the Titanic, the home place, wonder, longing etc. Kaplinski’s ecology was, to a great degree, an ecology of culture or ‘an ecology of the soul’; his views on solving environmental problems and sustainable culture coincided. He had a clear view of an ecological culture as part of a larger ecological system and did not draw clear lines between humans and other species. Kaplinski’s ecological thought was poetic and found expression in powerful images and linguistic patterns. In particular, I discuss two texts by Kaplinski: Ice and Heather and Leavers. Ice and Heather (1989) is a fragmentary collection of reminiscences, travel impressions, observations and meditations that has been called a prose text organised like poetry. At first sight, the work lacks a perceivable red thread creating coherence in narrative and textual organisation. The author’s mind keeps gliding from one topic to another, makes loops, the writing is associative. The thematic foci of the texts reside in childhood memories from the city of Tartu post-WWII, links between people and plants in different cultures and places, the traces and impact of the Ice Age in Scandinavia and Canada, biological descriptions of heather and heather communities, traces of war destruction in Lapland, Estonia and Germany, death and returning, travel impressions and observations from Lapland, thoughts on different religions, and depictions of an animist perception of the world by considering the sea, stones and plants. Motif analysis shows that the text’s thematically central axis can be found in linking heather and heather communities with the cultures of indigenous peoples of the North. The main image is not the time-honoured conceptual metaphor ‘humans are plants’, but rather the connection between humans and plants as parts of one whole. At the same time, Kaplinski does not make explicit declarations about the connectedness of humans and plants – this accumulates in metaphoric generalisations through the evolving of various topics, allusions and references. Most often, the author uses juxtapositions of humans and plants with a third element: conflagrations, ruins, Christian religion, the Ice Age. Analysed formally, the logical structure of Kaplinski’s extended metaphor could be the following: (1) kinsfolk share experiences and history; (2) humans and heather (or, more generally, Nordic flora) have similar experiences of the environment; (3) humans and heather are kin and belong together. Metaphoric transfer of meaning occurs between human kinship relations and ecological relations. Kaplinski’s creed is simple and thoroughly ecological: we are a heather people and can find neither happiness nor salvation outside our living environment or at the expense of it. Kaplinski’s Leavers includes three dystopian narratives on the relations of humans and nature that are presented from the point of view of genetic hybrids of humans and animals. The work can be read ecocritically as a description of the disintegrating and impoverished relations between humans and the natural environment in the context of the current mass extinction of species. The lack of meaningful relationships can be seen as the general state of living beings who have been extracted from their natural way of life and environment, be it an animal in a zoo or a human who has become alienated from meaningful work, nature and community. Proceeding from the biosemiotician Jakob von Uexküll, this broken state can be interpreted as a rupture in a being’s Umwelt: the meaningfully organised whole of the organism’s body, environment, senses and actions. The first-person depictions of the world seen through the eyes of the mutants emphasise the depth of the Umwelt rupture. This is not merely a question of humans having become detached from nature. The hybrid forms of the mutant bodies highlight the degree of such a shift: a different body radically changes the perception of, and the mode of being in, the world. Kaplinski’s artistic model in this text consists of shifting or removing the boundary between the organism and the environment, which results in environmental disintegration and the bodily deformation of living creatures turning into one and the same phenomenon. In Leavers, Kaplinski uses firstperson bodily experience as an artistic method to bring to readers’ attention the disappearance of species, destruction of nature and human alienation. Embodiment, bodily sensations and limitations are recurring topics in the book, examined from different perspectives. It has been difficult for humans to relate to climate change and the extinction of species, especially because these processes are seen as distant and unfathomable. Using the metaphor of the body makes it possible to perceive the environmental crisis. Kaplinski used the bodily deformations of mutants as an extended metaphor in order to describe the scope and effect of humans’ becoming distant from their natural environment. The logical structure of this extended metaphor is: (1) we are mutants; (2) we keep destroying nature of which we are part; (3) thus, the destruction of nature is self-mutilation. The metaphoric transfer of meaning occurs between the human body and the sphere of the environment. The texts discussed in the article employ the structure of extended metaphor to shift and transcend the boundary between humans and the environment. Including nature in human identity is certainly one of the most significant ways of moving towards a viable ecoculture. Extended metaphors as artistic models have an important role here. Through their imaginative dimension, extended metaphors create space for a dialogue between literary works and visual arts. Thus, Kaplinski’s texts have inspired several artistic interpretations, e.g. Kalli Kalde’s paintings illustrating Leavers and Britta Benno’s exhibition Ice and Heather. Kaplinski’s powerful ecological patterns of thought engage the reader, call into question the everyday view of the world and alter perception. Studies in cognitive linguistics have shown that the metaphoric structures of language are linked to the conceptual cores, categories and associations in human thought, and thus the use of new metaphoric associations in literature can bring about changes in thinking. In assessing the environmental impact of literature, the inner quality, ‘depth’ and intensity should be considered in addition to the number and circulation of texts. In this case, a text’s poetic structure, imagery, affectivity and thematic scope have impacts on readers, and the possibility arises that the text remains with readers, inspires thought and introduces changes in their ways of viewing the world. The artistic modelling of environmental relations can lead to changes in humans’ relations with the environment. In order to assess texts in the context of environmental change further, interdisciplinary research is required to analyse their artistic structure and compare them with actual experiences of appreciation and the environmental attitudes of readers.

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Image as a Propaganda Tool? Visual Representations of the ‘New Man’ in History Textbooks of the Socialist Era

Author(s): Esilda Luku / Language(s): English Issue: 24/2024

This paper aims to analyze whether the images employed in national history textbooks in Albania for the eight-year school under the socialist regime were used as a propaganda tool to communicate the Party’s vision for the socialist transformation of society. It adopts Kress and Van Leuween’s visual socio-semiotic approach to examine the images in terms of their representational, interactive, and compositional meta-function. The findings indicate that most of the images depict the “new socialist man,” who is willing to build up socialism and defend the homeland; they have been represented close to the viewer, as the latter belongs to the “new socialist society,” and the majority of the images place the “new man” in the center of the composition. Consequently, images in history textbooks served the state propaganda to manipulate and indoctrinate the young generation.

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Réflexion sur un phénomène optique qui inspire des philosophes

Réflexion sur un phénomène optique qui inspire des philosophes

Author(s): Anna Luňáková / Language(s): French Issue: Special/2024

The afterimage is generally considered to be an example of an optical illusion. But can it be more than just a trace of visual perception? The optical term nachbild, or afterimage, refers to this ghostly form of the visible, an image that is still there, even though the eye is no longer exposed to it. It is an example of the paradoxical phenomenon of an illusion that is real. If an image is followed by an image, how can it be preserved? What strategies can be used to delay the representation of someone or something? How does the image disappear and reappear? A reflection on the afterimage inspired by the term based on readings by Roland Barthes, the German philosopher, Gerhard Richter, Fried rich Kittler and Jacques Rancière. The image that remains as a shadow after the source disappears is a characteristic phenomenon of modernity. Exploring the extremes of existence is still important and can be a starting point for a literature that remains on the margins. A minority literature, homelessness, rejected as a shadow of the great and successful ones. This consideration is a starting point for future extensions into a deeper grasp of literary theory.

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Šejh Mes’ud Hadžimejlić na izložbi „A Red Golden Legend? The Return of the Saints in (Post)Communist Worlds“

Šejh Mes’ud Hadžimejlić na izložbi „A Red Golden Legend? The Return of the Saints in (Post)Communist Worlds“

Author(s): Zora Kostadinova,Meliha Teparić / Language(s): Bosnian Issue: 65-68/2024

Review of the exhibition "A RED GOLDEN LEGEND? The Return of the Saints in (Post)Communist Worlds"

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