Andreas Broeckmann on Thu, 3 Dec 1998 16:27:53 +0100 |
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Syndicate: EBR: EAST/EURO/POMO |
Date: Thu, 03 Dec 1998 13:51:03 -0800 From: insomnia/vladislava gordic <insomnia@EUnet.yu> Electronic Book Review, the online literary forum (http://www.altx.com/ebr/), has released its latest issue on EAST/EURO/POMO ("Postmodern Writing in Eastern and Central Europe"). This ebr special goes online as ethnic conflicts intensify in Kosovo and pressure on Serbian university and media continues. Still, guest editor Vladislava Gordic, University professor from Novi Sad, Yugoslavia, along with the contributors from Poland, Romania, Hungary, Western Europe, and the U.S., have little to say about the spectacle of carnage produced by an atavistic and fragmenting nation-state. Instead, one catches the spirit of another moment, the winter of 1996/97 when a different kind of spectacle held sway in Belgrade, through unprecedented, festive, and remarkably long-lived street demonstrations that reached Western screens via contacts through the Internet, bypassing the government's centralized control of local TV and radio. In Eastern Europe there has long been a fully developed literature, a particular mix of genres and narrative arts that demonstrate all the ambivalent and alienating features of Western postmodernism - such as an adherence to formal experimentation, a narrative self-consciousness, a way of "magicking the real," and a minimalist approach to story-telling. Drawing influences from its massive cultural heritage and ongoing political turbulence ("its territorial and ideological flame wars," in Gordic's words), East European pomo suffers no shortage of gifted, remarkable writers of an experimental cast, such as Milorad Pavic, whose fantastical and allegorical work (a print anticipation of hypertext) may turn out to be no less insightful about the region's racial, ethnic, and religious divisiveness than the more conventionally configured "Bosnian Chronicle" by Nobel prizewinner Ivo Andric. This ebr special offers essays on Milorad Pavic's paratextual play, Mikhail Bulgakov and Milos Crnjanski as the forerunners of postmodernism, the portrait of the last world's peripatetic writer Miroslav Mandic, a media parable on the new concept of the global dictatorship, Alice's Adventures in Sanctionland, a survey of Romanian literature in its clash with postmodern sensibilities, a view on Polish poetry, and much more. Check it at http://www.altx.com/ebr/ebr8