Universitätsbibliothek
Encyclopedia of fundamentalism
Publisher
Location
Bulgarien : zwischen West und Ost vom 7. bis 20. Jahrhundert : Sozial- und kulturhistorisch bedeutsame Epochen, Ereignisse und Gestalten
Publisher
Location
Vorwort VII
Wahrnehmungen
Anstelle einer Einleitung 1
ERSTES KAPITEL
Aufstiege und Zusammenbrüche
Bulgarenreiche zwischen Rom und Byzanz,
Franken und Russen, Serben und Osmanen
(681-1396) 33
ZWEITES KAPITEL
Christianisierung, Schriftsprache, Kultur
Slawenapostel, Schüler und Schulen.
Goldene Zeitalter im Ersten und Zweiten Bulgarenreich
(863-1371) 73
DRTlTES KAPITEL
Osmanische Fremdherrschaft
Merkmale und Folgen. Kirche und kulturelle Identität.
Aufstände und europäische Reaktionen
(1 396-1 876) 97
VIERTES KAP1TEL
Wiedergeburt
Von der "Slawobulgarischen Geschichte" 1762
bis zur Verfassung von Tarnovo 1879 135
FUNFTES KAPITEL
Befreier und Befreite
Bulgarien, Rußland und die europäischen
Großmächte zwischen 1879 und 1918 159
SECHSTES KAPITEL
Kriege und Katastrophen
Bulgarien im 20. Jahrhundert 189
Nachwort 228
Quellen- und Literaturverzeichnis 233
Bulgarische Khane, Fürsten, Könige/Zaren 247
Personenregister 251
Altsyrien und Libanon : Geschichte, Wirtschaft und Kultur vom Neolithikum bis Nebukadnezar
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Location
Vorwort . . XI
I Einleitung . . 1
II Methode . . 3
III Der Naturraum . . 5
IV Das Neolithikum - Umbruch in Wirtschaftsform und Lebensweise . . 10
V Die Halaf - und Ubaidzeit (Chalkolithikum) . . 40
VI Der Beginn der Frühbronzezeit: Dörfer - Handel - Kolonien in Syrien, Libanon und Mesopotamien . . 56
VII Vom Dorf zur Stadt - die Urbanisierung Syries und des Libanon im Verlauf der frühen Bronzezeit . . 69
VIII De-Urbanisierung in Syrien/Libanon - Verschiebungen der politischen Kräfteverhältnisse und ihre Auswirkungen auf die Entwicklung der Region . . 111
IX Die Mittelbronzezeit - Handel, Städte und Nomaden . . 118
X Die Spätbronzezeit - neue Formen der Fremdherrschaft . . 158
XI Die Eisenzeit - Neue Zentren, Fremdherrschaft und das "Ende der altorientalischen Geschichte" . . 210
Verzeichnis der Tabellen . . 261
Bibliographie . . 263
Karten . . 287
Aleksander Wat und "sein" Jahrhundert
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Location
Vorwort 7
I. Geschichte
ZDZISLAW KRASNODĘBSKI
Nach der Verführung. Aleksander Wats und unsere Begegnung
mit dem Kommunismus 13
WITOLD KO?NY
Aleksander Wat über das Thema "Die Deutschen
und der Nationalsozialismus" 39
LEONID LUKS
Hassliebe? - Aleksander Wats Russlandbild 60
GERMAN RITZ
Aleksander Wat - der versuchte Neubeginn nach 1946 66
WALTER KOSCHMAL
Literarische AustreiLung eines teuflischen Jahrhunderts. Aleksander Wats
Weg zu einem ethischen Literaturverständnis (ťMein JahrhundertŤ) 88
HANS-CHRISTIAN TREPTE
Aleksander Wat in der literarischen Kommunikation des Exils 106
II. Religion
GWIDO ZLATKES
The 4th Warsaw Mystic - Aleksander Wat's Encounter With The Devil
In History 131
SLAWOMIR JACEK ŻUREK
Gespräche Baruchs mit Jeremia. Uber die Prophezeiungen von Czeslaw
Milosz und Aleksander Wat aus den ťGesprochenen ErinnerungenŤ 150
RYSZARL ZAJĽCZKOWSKI
An der Kreuzung der Gedanken. Uber manche intellektuelle Inspirationen
von Aleksander Wat 162
III. Lyrik und Identität
JÓZEF OLEJNICZAK
"Ich ist ein anderer". Abenteuer des Subjekts von Aleksander Wat 175
KRYSTYNA PTETRYCH
"Was hat die Lyrik vom Schmerz?" Über das Leiden in der Lyrik
Aleksander Wats 189
MAREK TOMASZEWSKI
Die mediterranen Wurzeln des Werkes von Aleksander Wat 204
JAN ZIELIŃSKI
Ekphrasis in der Lyrik von Aleksander Wat 218
TOMAS VENCLOVA
Aleksander Wat und Jossif Brodskij 235
IV. Avantgarde und Moderne
MATTHTAS FRETSE
Aleksander Wat und das Ende der Avantgarde 251
WŁODZTMTERZ BOLECKT
Von der "Postmoderne" zur "Moderne" (Wat - Die andere Erfahrung) 276
Zu den Autoren 295
Personenregister 297
The Viking-age rune-stones : custom and commemoration in early medieval Scandinavia
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Location
List of Plates xii
list of Figures xiv
List of Maps xv
List of Tables xvi
Sources, Abbreviations, and Conventions xvii
Introduction 1
SURVEY
1. Rune-stones, their Distribution and Historical Background 7
1.1. The rune-stones and their distribution 7
1.2. Previous work 15
1.3. Why were the rune-stones erected? 16
1.4. Historical background 20
2. Presentation of the Corpus and its Subgroup; Bases of Analyses 24
I. The Corpus
2.1. Variables 24
2.2. General features 25
2.3. Regional groupings 27
2.4. Chronology and datingproblems 28
II. The Relationship Subgroup and Categories of Relationship
2.5. The nature of relationships between sponsors and deceased 37
2.6. Sponsorship patterns 38
2.7. Complex relationships 41
III. Bases of Analyses
2.8. Inscriptions 42
2.9. Relationships 43
3. Property and Inheritance 47
I. The Inscriptions as Declarations of Inheritance
3.1. The importance of individual details in interpreting
runic inscriptions 51
3.2. The sponsorship pattern as reflecting property rights 57
II. The Sponsors as Holders of Joint or Inherited Property
3.3. Joint ownership 59
3.4. Inheritance customs 63
3.5. Unspecified relationships 66
3.6. Conclusion 68
4. Inheritance: Customs and Laws 71
4.1. Inheritance and other devolutions of property 72
4.2. The runic evidence 74
4.3. Gradual and parentela principles 77
4.4. The sponsorship patterns 78
4.5. Why were different inheritance principles preferred? 83
4.6. The laws 84
4.7. Sponsorship patterns and the laws 86
4.8. Differences within Uppland 87
4.9. Conclusion 90
5. Societyand Status 92
5.1. Sponsors and deceased 92
5.2. Title-bearers 99
5.3. Epithets 101
5.4. Thegns and drengs 103
5.5. Boni homines 107
5.6. Women as landholders
5.7. Travellers 116
5.8. Conclusion 122
6. Conversion 124
6.1. Transition: pagan and/or Christian? 125
6.2. Pagan features 129
6.3. Christian features 133
6.4. Conclusion 145
7. Conclusion and Future Research 146
7.1. The rune-stone fashion 146
7.2. Late Viking-Age society 152
7.3. Future research 154
Excursus: The Tug-of-War over Thyre 158
Appendices
1. Distribution of Rune-stones 167
2. Categories of Sponsors and Deceased 168
3. Frequency of Relationships 169
4. Inheritances 170
5. Unspecified Relationships Implying Inheritance 172
6. Titles 174
7. Epithets 178
8. 'Bonder' 184
9. Travellers 185
10. Bridge-builders 186
CATALOGUE
Explanatory Notes
Denmark and Bornholm 200
Further Particulars 206
Norway 207
Further Particulars 209
Sweden (excluding Uppland) 210
Further Particulars 233
Uppland 238
Further Particulars 257
References 263
The Mourning Voice : an essay on Greek tragedy
Publisher
Location
Foreword by Pietro Pucci ix
Translator's Note xv
I. Greek Tragedy: Political Drama or Oratorio? I
In which the contemporary reader rediscovers the significance of oratorio in Greek tragedy.
Sartre's Trojan Women 3
Greek Tragedy: Is It Relovant? 8
What the Mourning Voice of Tragedy Tells Us 1l
II. The Theater of Dionysus Is Not in the Agora 14
In which the reader learns tbat Greck tragedy is more tban a controlled sef-representation that the city-state chooses to reveal.
The Agora, the Theater, the Pnyx 15
A Political Stage? 19
Mourning Becomes Electra 20
In the Theater of Dionysus, Seditious Assemblies 23
III. Tragedy and the Antipolitical 26
In which the reader measures how tragedy, as opposed to civic discourse, expresses ineffable grief by means of the oratorio.
Aei versus aei: Aspects of a Conflict 27
Electra, Again and Always 32
CONTENTS
Aei, aiei, aini
The Sound of the Cry 38
IV. The Dilemma of the Self and the Other in Tragedy 42
In which the reader learns how tragedy, as something other than civic discourse, mocks the obligation toforget and the ban on memory.
A Ban on Memory and Its Consequences 42
The Persians, between Civic Education and the
Pleasure of Dionysus 44
Between the Self and the Other, a Delicate Balance 49
The Other Is the Self, and They Are Mortals Equally 50
V. Songwithout Lyre 54
In which the readergrasps how tragedy exploits the
prohiLitions and opposition of political discourse.
Glory, Song, Tears 56
An Incompatible Form? 59
Under the Sign of the Oxymoron 62
VI. Dionysus, Apollo 66
In which the reader hears, between song and cry, the mourning voice of tragedy that mixes and disturbs civic identities.
The Muse of Sorrow 67
Shared Cnes 72
Loxias's Crying Woman and Apollo's Bacchante 75
Conclusion: From Citizen to Spectator 81
In which the reader sres tbat, in the theater on the Pnyx, the
spectator discovers throngh catharsis that he is a mortalfrst, a
citizen second.
The Play of Emotions 83
The Individual, the Collectivity, the Theater 85
Choral Catharsis 90
Notes 95
Acknowledgrnents 121
Index 123
The globalization of world politics : an introduction to international relations
Publisher
Location
Detailed contents xiii
List of figures xix
List of boxes xx
List of tables xxv
About the contributors xxvi
Introduction 1
Steve Smith and John Baylis
1 The globalization of world politics 13
Jan Aart Scholte
Part One The historical context
2 The evolution of international society 35
Robert H. Jackson
3 International history1900-1945 51
Susan L. Carruthers
4 International history 1945-1990 74
Len Scott
5 The end of the cold war 92
Richard Crockatt
6 International history since 1989 111
Michael Cox
Part Two Theories of world politics
7 Realism 141
Tim Dunne and Brian C. Schmidt
8 Liberalism 162
Tim Dunne
9 Contemporary mainstream approaches: neo-realism
and neo-liberalism 182
Steven L. Lamy
10 Marxist theories of International Relations 200
Stephen Hobden and Richard Wyn Jones
11 Reflectivist and constructivist approaches to international
theory 224
Steve Smith
Part Three Structures and processes
12 International and global security in the post-cold war era 253
John Baylis
13 International political economy in an age of globalization 277
Ngaire Woods
14 International regimes 299
Richard Little
15 Diplomacy 337
Brian White
16 The United Nations and international order 331
Paul Taylor
17 Transnational actors and international organizations
in global politics 356
Peter Willetts
Part Four International issues
18 Environmental issues 387
Owen Greene
19 Nuclear proliferation 415
Darryl Howlett
20 Nationalism 440
Fred Halliday
21 Culture in world affairs 456
Simon Murden
22 Humanitarian intervention and world politics 470
Nicholas J. Wheeler and Alex I Bellamy
23 European and regional integration 494
Thomas Christiansen
24 Global trade and finance 519
Jan Aart Scholte
25 The communications and Internet revolution 540
Jonathan Aronson
26 Poverty, development, and hunger 559
Caroline Thomas
27 Gender issues 582
Jan Jindy Pettman
28 Human rights 599
Chris Brown
Part Five Globalization in the future
29 Globalization and the transformation of political community 617
Andrew Linklater
30 Globalization and the post-cold war order 634
lan Clark
References 649
Index 667
Strategy in the Contemporary World : an introduction to strategic studies
Publisher
Location
Introduction . . 1
PART ONE Enduring issues of strategy
1 Strategic Theory and the History of War . . 17
2 Law, Politics, and the Use of Force . . 45
3 The Causes of War and the Conditions of Peace . . 66
4 Land Warfare: Theory and Practice . . 91
5 Sea Power: Theory and Practice . . 113
6 Air Power: Theory and Practice . . 137
PART THREE Twentieth-century theories: an update
7 Deterrence in the Post-Cold War World . . 161
8 Arms Control and Disarmament . . 183
9 Terrorism and Irregular Warfare . . 208
PART FOUR Contemporary issues of grand strategy
10 Technology and Warfare . . 235
11 Weapons of Mass Destruction . . 254
12 Humanitarian Intervention and Peace Operations . . 286
13 A New Agenda for Security and Strategy? . . 309
14 Conclusion: The Future of Strategic Studies . . 328
Staatsarchiv Danzig : Wegweiser durch die Bestände bis zum jahr 1945
Publisher
Location
Shakespeare and Eastern Europe
Publisher
Location
Maps and Illustrations . . ix
Introduction . . 1
1. In the Beginning . . 6
2. Shakespeare under the Tsars . . 26
3. Shakespeare and National Revivals . . 57
4. Shakespeare after the Bolshevik Revolution . . 77
5. Shakespeare behind the Iron Curtain . . 96
6. Post-Communist Shakespeare . . 136
Notes . . 148
A Select Bibliography . . 154
Index . . 157