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The Russians must reflect on the evildoings

Sign and Sight - 7 min 18 sec ago
The historically strained relations between Russia and Poland seem to be improving at long last, thanks to the considerable show of Russian sympathy at the funeral of the Polish president Lech Kaczynski. It remains to be seen whether these positive developments will continue beyond a short-lived expression of mourning. An interview with Arseni Roginski, the president of the Russian human rights organisation "Memorial", by Ulrich M. Schmid.
Categories: Arts & Letters

Herta Müller's novel "Everything I Own I Carry With Me"

Sign and Sight - 7 min 18 sec ago
The new novel by Nobel laureate Herta Müller tells of a harrowing experience which will leave an indelible stamp on its survivor for the rest of his life. Her book stems from interviews with the poet Oskar Pastior and other Gulag survivors. An excerpt in English.
Categories: Arts & Letters

"Don't turn your backs now"

Sign and Sight - 7 min 18 sec ago
Hungary swung sharply to the right in its recent elections, in what the new premier Victor Orban called "the great transition". Peter Nadas talks to Jörg Lau about the lack of stability in his country on the eve of its EU presidency, and about the responsibility of the west.
Categories: Arts & Letters

The scramble for Timbuktu

Sign and Sight - 7 min 18 sec ago
In Timbuktu, Islamic Africa is rediscovering its written culture. Charlotte Wiedemann travelled to the site of the oldest library south of the Sahara to report on the race for influence over this ancient heritage, played out on a small stage of sand and parchment.
Categories: Arts & Letters

Compromise, consensus and knee-capping

Sign and Sight - 7 min 18 sec ago
The Dutch polder model is under threat. The PVV party of Dutch Islam critic Geert Wilders stands a good chance of victory in the next elections, which have been been brought forward to June. In the election campaign the Dutch elite will be hard pushed to steer political debate or discuss key issues in any nuanced way. By Hans Maarten van den Brink
Categories: Arts & Letters

"Don't let this become a witch hunt"

Sign and Sight - 7 min 18 sec ago
The Austrian writer Josef Haslinger talks about his sexual encounters with paedophile priests as a boy in a Catholic boarding school. Instead of joining the chorus of moral outrage, he acknowledges the full spectrum of feelings that these episodes provoked, and argues that simple criminalisation is not the way forward.
Photo: Josef Haslinger by Tom Langdon
Categories: Arts & Letters

Kapuscinki's poetic license

Sign and Sight - 7 min 18 sec ago
Artur Domoslawksi's biography "Ryszard Kapuscinski non-fiction" sparked controversy even before it was published. Not only does it show the legendary reporter warts and all, it also shows where the reportage ends and fiction begins.  Polityka's Daniel Passent meets the author who, in spite of it all, still regards Kapuscinski as his friend and master.
Categories: Arts & Letters

Call the spade a spade

Sign and Sight - 7 min 18 sec ago
Since its publication in January, Helene Hegemann's novel "Axolotl Roadkill" has been at the centre of a debate whose vagaries of terminology have allowed the seriousness of the case to be downplayed. Philipp Theisohn wishes the literary establishment would drop all its talk of intertextuality in favour of a more democratic category: plagiarism.
Categories: Arts & Letters

Talking to the lord of pain

Sign and Sight - 7 min 18 sec ago
The director Werner Herzog is the president of the jury at this, the 60th Berlinale. Katja Nicodemus met him in Los Angeles to discuss burning Lilliputians, how it feels like to be unsuccessfully shot at, and the life of a lone Bavarian wolf in Hollywood.
Categories: Arts & Letters

The attack of the 13th fairy

Sign and Sight - 7 min 18 sec ago
Filmmaker and writer Alexander Kluge is no optimist, but he knows ways out of the present. Freitag magazine engages him in a conversation about the World Wide Web, dragonflies, the belief in better human beings and why he likes "gardener" as a job description.
Categories: Arts & Letters

Herta Müller recommends Liu Xiaobo for Nobel Peace Prize

Sign and Sight - 7 min 18 sec ago
In a letter to the Nobel Foundation, Herta Müller expresses her support for the nomination of Liu Xiaobo for the Nobel Peace Prize, "because in the face of countless threats from the Chinese regime and great risk to his life, he has fought unerringly for the freedom of the individual."
Categories: Arts & Letters

The apathy and the ecstasy

Sign and Sight - 7 min 18 sec ago
Riding the retro wave, singers from across the spectrum of popular music have brought back falsetto with a vengeance. While this is mostly in homage to bygone styles and idols, it has also introduced new nuances of meaning. Ueli Bernays traces falsetto's high-pitched passage from expression to gimmick and back.
Categories: Arts & Letters

Citizen journalism in Iran

Sign and Sight - 7 min 18 sec ago
Thirty years of superficial reporting by the Western press neglected the build up to the current turmoil in Tehran. Iranians are not risking their lives because of an alleged election fraud last June, but because they have endured thirty years of brutality, humiliation and frustration. By Haideh Daragahi
Categories: Arts & Letters

Musicology and mass execution

Sign and Sight - 7 min 18 sec ago
Hans Heinrich Eggebrecht was one of Germany's most influential musicologists. His magnum opus "Music in the Occident" sits on the shelves of many a music lover. Ten years after his death, historian Boris von Haken has now revealed that Eggebrecht was involved in mass shootings of Jews during the Second World War.
Categories: Arts & Letters

The "Islam in Europe" debate

Sign and Sight - 7 min 18 sec ago
Who should the West support: moderate Islamists like Tariq Ramadan, or Islamic dissidents like Ayaan Hirsi Ali? Are the rights of the group higher than those of the individual? With a fiery polemic against Ian Buruma's "Murder in Amsterdam" and Timothy Garton Ash's review of this book in the New York Review of Books, Pascal Bruckner has kindled an international debate. By now Ian Buruma, Timothy Garton Ash, Necla Kelek, Paul Cliteur, Lars Gustafsson, Stuart Sim, Ulrike Ackermann, Adam Krzeminski, Halleh Ghorashi, Bassam Tibi and Margriet de Moor have all stepped into the ring.
Categories: Arts & Letters

Our favourites

Sign and Sight - 7 min 18 sec ago
Here you'll find links to newspapers, magazines and other useful culture-related websites
Categories: Arts & Letters

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Sign and Sight - 7 min 18 sec ago
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Categories: Arts & Letters

Trust: Money, markets and society

Eurozine (Articles) - 7 min 21 sec ago
When financial and economic systems fail, trust in the state and its institutions pays the price, writes Geoffrey Hosking. After the economic crisis and its exposure of the irresponsibility of global capitalism, the first step to restoring social trust is to understand what went wrong.
Categories: Arts & Letters

Great pretender

Eurozine (Articles) - 7 min 21 sec ago
Feminist icon, anti-Catholic fabrication ? or just a woman battling in a man's world? The German film "Die Päpstin" has already been written off by the Italian Bishops' Conference as a hoax. Sally Feldman explores reasons for the power and tenacity of the myth of Pope Joan.
Categories: Arts & Letters

The many, messy histories

Eurozine (Articles) - 7 min 21 sec ago
"New Humanist" sees no humanitarian solutions to political crises; "Fronesis" asks who the People are; "Osteuropa" examines the gaffe-prone politics of European identity; "Dilema veche" says leaving Romania is the most effective form of protest; "L'Homme" revisits 19th-century arguments for the abolition of prostitution; "Arena" questions the impact of the Swedish Sex Purchase Act; "Le Monde diplomatique" (Oslo) avoids another story of western selflessnes; and "Studija" welcomes a timely exhibition of Soviet-era painting.
Categories: Arts & Letters
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