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News AggregatorThe populist radical Right: A pathological normalcy
According to the conventional view, the far-Right in Europe is antithetical to the values of liberal democracy. New research showing that far-Right ideology is a radicalization of mainstream values has a major impact on how rightwing populism is understood, writes Cas Mudde.
Categories: Arts & Letters
Aid wars
Humanitarian activists' refusal of politics, combined with their willingness to identify with politics, elicits doubt and even scorn from human-rights critics. Susie Linfield evaluates the controversial debate on the future of humanitarianism.
Categories: Arts & Letters
Look at my dress
When I was 22 I wanted to find a different way of writing about being a man, says Norwegian novelist Geir Gulliksen. It should be possible to be as gentle as a boy or as reckless as a girl. But gender stereotypes have not changed as radically as we think.
Categories: Arts & Letters
The depths of the Golden Age
The memory of socialism in Georgia is a contradictory one. Some romanticize it as a golden age of stability, others construe it as foreign rule. The textbook has become the link between politics, pedagogy and history. How the past is construed is in flux.
Categories: Arts & Letters
Cultivated mixture
The attraction of opera -- the sanctuary of bourgeois culture -- to critical artists has to do with its formal strictures, argues Diedrich Diederichsen. Opera's high degree of "definition" provides a counterpoint to the variety of non-European-white-heteromasculine perspectives.
Categories: Arts & Letters
Are newspapers still relevant?
It is not the Internet that is responsible for the "crisis of the press", but subordination of journalism to the market, writes the political editor of the "Süddeutsche Zeitung". For the first time since 1945, German journalism risks becoming trivialized. [Polish version added]
Categories: Arts & Letters
Loving the enemy: Al-Qaeda's vision of the West
9/11 organizer Khalid Sheikh Mohammed exploited his trial to remind the court of its human rights obligations, while Osama bin Laden's statements include appeals to religious pluralism. Al-Qaeda's use of liberal categories is central to its rhetoric, writes Faisal Devji. [German version added]
Categories: Arts & Letters
On the post-city
As the ideological frenzy of modernism gives way to "content management systems", and as global megacities render obsolete the urban grid and its certainties, societies of discipline become societies of control. Daniel Miller cracks open the password protected "post-city". [Polish version added]
Categories: Arts & Letters
Culturalism: Culture as political ideology
The multiculturalism debate has changed the political fronts. The Left defends minority cultures while the Right stands guard over national culture. Both are variants of a culturalist ideology, argue Jens-Martin Eriksen and Frederik Stjernfelt. [Polish version added]
Categories: Arts & Letters
Performative biographism
"Passage" finds contemporary Danish literature is all about me, me, me; "Vikerkaar" offers a perspective on contemporary European literature; "Mittelweg 36" asks who is authorized to speak about rape; "Revista Crítica" argues that trafficking laws omit the crucial factor of citizenship; "Gegenworte" observes art and science converge in the study of living systems; "Res Publica Nowa" takes a dispassionate approach to political debate; "Springerin" sees artists failing to respond to Right culture; and "Dilema veche" explains why in Romania only the mad refuse a bribe.
Categories: Arts & Letters
Literary perspectives: Estonia
While the Great Estonian Novel has yet to be written, the range of fiction in Estonia is wide enough to serve as an indicator of the post-communist country's hopes and fears, anxieties and obsessions. writes the editor of "Vikerkaar". [Russian version added]
Categories: Arts & Letters
As the fog lifted
In the twenty years since the fall of communism, literature has been lifting the fog that had settled over the expanses of eastern central Europe. A survey of the post-'89 wave of eastern European literature by Suhrkamp editor Katharina Raabe. [Estonian version added]
Categories: Arts & Letters
Literary perspectives: The Netherlands
While the work of novelists Jan Siebelink and Arnon Grunberg reflect the new need for security in the Netherlands, a parallel strand of contemporary Dutch literature sidesteps such concerns: writers with migrant backgrounds are introducing new styles into the Dutch literary repertoire. [Estonian version added]
Categories: Arts & Letters
Art and science: An interdisciplinary approach
Not only artists but also scientists work with images, symbols and metaphors, draw on their intuition and make use of coincidence. How the humanities can inform a non-classical and non-reductionist approach to cancer research and living systems as a whole.
Categories: Arts & Letters
Africa: Free to Air - World debate - Will the real Africa stand up?
2010 marks an important period in the annals of Africa: it’s the year when a 10-year follow-up on the declaration of the Millennium Development Goals (MDG’s) will be made, 5 year post the Gleneagles G8 Summit commitments, 26th anniversary of the Ethiopian famine that claimed the lives of millions, and a year when 17 African countries are marking their 50th anniversary since independence. ...
South Africa: Defend and advance the freedom of expression for all!
Press Freedom is a right enjoyed by a privileged minority of South Africans. Our print media is controlled by a cartel of four corporations. Broadcast Media is dominated by the SABC. The profiteering of private media and commercialization of the SABC...
Togo: France condemns conduct of officer after dispute
French officials have condemned a senior soldier who was filmed threatening a Togolese journalist. In a video released on YouTube, Lt Col Romuald Letondot is shown ordering the journalist to delete images from his camera during a protest in Lome....
South Africa: The ANC's media double-speak
The ruling African National Congress (ANC) has just released a document on the media for its National General Council (NGC) meeting, scheduled for September. The document, entitled 'Media transformation, ownership and diversity', claims to build on a...
Burundi: IFJ calls for release of journalist
The International Federation of Journalists (IFJ) has called for immediate and unconditional release of Thierry Ndayishimiye, Director and Publisher of the private weekly magazine Arc-en-ciel, who was arrested on Tuesday, August 10th, 2010 and deta...
Senegal: IFJ urges removal of concealment charge against journalist
The International Federation of Journalists (IFJ) has called on the Senegalese authorities to put an end to the legal proceedings against Abdou Latif Coulibaly, investigative journalist and Director of Publication of the weekly magazine, La Gazette, ...
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