Presseschau-Absätze
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Rubrik: Feuilletons, Stichwort: Paris - 76 Presseschau-Absätze - Seite 1 von 6
Feuilletons 06.12.2013 […] of disparate entities, animating an object, objectifying a human body part, or casting a dazzling web of shadows on it."
Der Historiker Timothy Snyder ermuntert in der NYRB die EU nachdrücklich, die Demonstranten in der Ukraine zu unterstützen. Janukowitsch habe die falschen Gründe, das Abkommen mit der EU nicht zu unterzeichnen: "If this is a revolution, it must be one of the most common-sense revolutions […] controlling it, and therefore that smart geopolitics involves turning them against each other. (...) The dangerous fantasy is the Russian idea that Ukraine is not really a different country, but rather a kind of slavic younger brother. This is a legacy of the late Soviet Union and the russification policies of the 1970s. It has no actual historical basis..."
[…] revolutions in history. But the desire of so many to be able to have normal lives in a normal country is opposed by two fantasies, one of them now exhausted and the other extremely dangerous. The exhausted fantasy is that of Ukraine's geopolitical significance. Ukrainian president Viktor Yanukovych seems to believe, and he is not alone, that because Ukraine lies between the European Union and Russia, […]
Feuilletons 22.01.2013 […] New Inquiry's co-founder Rachel Rosenfelt as 'young, Web-savvy and idealistic.' She wore 'a black sweater, miniskirt and combat boots.' Her cohorts donned 'untucked oxford shirts and off-brand jeans' and, shockingly, 'despite the fact that everyone was young and attractive, no one seemed to flirt or network' at a staff meeting. Imagine that!" Nun kommt aber der Jacobin (Website) des hochbegabten und […] und superlinken Bhaskar Sunkara: "Sunkara sounds (and is) young, but also deserving; not so much 'scrappy' as unapologetically wise beyond his years, a man to keep on our radar. What do you think he was wearing?" Tja, da gibt die New York Times diesmal keine Auskunft.
Es gibt zwar immer mehr Gründe, die gegen den Besitz kultureller Güter sprechen, aber ganz ohne Hilfestellung eht's auch nicht, meint […]
Feuilletons 12.09.2012 […] immer beides war: "When I was a small boy, and when I went on the Carso, the border, which was closer to my home than one part of Paris to another part of Paris, it was until a certain time, it was impossible. I saw this border, and until the rupture of Tito and Stalin and until the normalization between Italy and Yugoslavia, it was impossible. Behind this border there was a world that was for me disquieting […] Europe has its own East to refuse. But at the same time, behind this border there was a territory I knew very well, because this territory had been Italian. I had been several times in this familiar world. This feeling of something that is both very known and unknown, it's very important for literature. Literature is a voyage from the known to the unknown, or the contrary. Something which seems very familiar […]