Representing and (de)constructing borderlands
Titel: | Representing and (de)constructing borderlands / edited by Grzegorz Moroz and Jacek Partyka |
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Beteiligt: | ; |
Veröffentlicht: | Newcastle upon Tyne : Cambridge Scholars Publishing, 2016 |
Umfang: | xii, 211 Seiten |
Format: | Buch |
Sprache: | Englisch |
ISBN: | 9781443887083 ; 1443887080 ; 9781443888608 |
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Inhaltsverzeichnis
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This volume stems from the assumption that broadly-understood borderlands, as well as peripheries, provinces or uttermost ends of different kinds, are abodes of significant culture-generating forces. From the academic point of view, their undeniable appeal lies in the fact that they constitute spaces of mutual interactions and enable new cultural phenomena to surface, grow or decline, and, as such, are worth thorough and constant scrutiny. However, they also provide the setting for radical clashes between ideologies, languages, religions, customs, and, as the media report every single day, armies or guerrilla units. Living within such areas of creative dynamics and destructive friction (or visiting them, even vicariously as the contributors to the volume do) is tantamount to exposing oneself to a difference. One's response to this difference--either in the form of rejection or, more preferably, acceptance (or a mixture of both)--is not merely an index of one's tolerance (a platitudinised term itself that all too often hides an attitude of comfortable indifference), but an affirmation of humaneness. Borderlands are paradoxical, if not aporetic, loci. They simultaneously connote territories on either side of a border, in a literal sense, and a vague, intermediate state or region, in a metaphorical sense. Encapsulating the idea of border, the term indicates both inescapable nearness and unavoidable (or perhaps unbridgeable) separateness. Its semantic load, then, offers two distinct, apparently mutually exclusive, ideas. This contradiction ceases to be a logical snag only when discussing the strategy of double focus. The studies included in the volume focus on various aspects of borderland art and literature, on analyses of selected works, and on the peculiarities of cultural and literary representations. Thus, the borderland landscape, both literal and metaphorical, comes to be seen as a factor contributing to the emergence of new, distinct and identifiable themes and motifs, as well as theoretical frameworks.