Contents: Tessa Hauswedell: Introduction – Paul Gifford: Defining ‘Others’: how interperceptions shape identities – Jane Pettegree: Writing Christendom in the English Renaissance: a reappraisal of Denys Hay’s view of the emergence of ‘Europe’ – Kate Marsh: The feminized Indian Other: English and French conceptions of ‘womanhood’ – Patricia Howe: Appropriation and alienation: women travellers and the construction of identity – Wanda Campbell: Eden lost and found: early Canadian women poets look back to Europe – Judith Froemmer: Crucesignati - signed with the cross: Tasso’s poetics of crusade – Volker Langbehn: Disciplining the black body: German colonialism and visual violence – Sven Kramer: Including and excluding the Holocaust: changing perceptions in German and European identities – Michaela Peroutkova: Narratives about the expulsion of Germans: a German-Czech comparison – Boris Previsic: Europe’s blind spot on violence: the fall of Yugoslavia and references to World War II – Jonathan H. Hsy: ‘Oure Occian’: littoral language and the Constance narratives of Chaucer and Boccaccio – Frances Nethercott: Russia and the West: Russian histories of the European Other – Meliz Ergin: Otherness within Turkey, and between Turkey and Europe – Roger Hillman: Transnationalism in the films of Fatih Akin – Kunio Tsunekawa: ‘Mirror of the West’: a critique and a plea.
The Editors: Paul Gifford is Buchanan Professor (Emeritus) of
French at the University of St Andrews. His specialism lies in
twentieth-century literature and thought, in textual genetics and
in identity studies. For ten years he directed the Institute of
European Cultural Identity Studies at St Andrews. He is currently
Visiting Research Fellow with the Girard Foundation at Stanford
University.
Tessa Hauswedell holds a Ph.D. from the Institute for European
Cultural Identity Studies, University of St Andrews. Her thesis,
completed in 2009, deals with the question of discursive European
identity formation in European cultural journals from 1989 to 2006.
«The objective of this book (...) was successfully achieved. All the case studies contribute to the debate about the Self-Other conception by original topics and highly interesting insights into this issue. Therefore this publication is certainly recommendable to the readers.» (Martina Ponížilová, Politics in Central Europe)
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