Decentering European Intellectual Space.
- 1st ed.
- 1 online resource (307 pages)
- European Studies ; v.35 .
- European Studies .
Intro -- Decentering European Intellectual Space -- Copyright -- Contents -- Notes on Contributors -- 1 At the Periphery of European Intellectual Space -- Part 1: Reconsidering European Intellectual Space -- 2 Facing Asymmetry: Nordic Intellectuals and Center-Periphery Dynamics -- 3 From Periphery to Center: The Origins and Worlding of Ibsen's Drama -- 4 The Transnational Hierarchies and Networks of the Artistic Avant-garde ca. 1885-1915 -- 5 Redefining Historical Materialism in the Peripheries of Marxism: Georges Sorel and Antonio Labriola between France, Italy, and Germany -- Part 2: Negotiating the Center -- 6 Repositioning Spain: The Political and Intellectual Involvements of Azańa and Ortega -- 7 Spatial Asymmetries: Regionalist Intellectual Projects in East Central Europe in the Interwar Period -- 8 European Small-State Academics and the Rise of the United States as an Intellectual Center: The Cases of Halvdan Koht and Heikki Waris -- 9 Practicing "Europe": Georg Lukács, Ágnes Heller, and the Budapest School -- Part 3: Cold War Dynamics -- 10 Greece, Europe, and the Making of the Enlightenment in the Periphery -- 11 Europe, West and East, and the Polish Émigré Writers from Kultura: Five Stories about Asymmetry -- 12 Feminist Intellectuals: From Yugoslavia, in Europe -- Index.
Decentering European Intellectual Space reconsiders the nature of cultural Europe by challenging intellectual historians to pay closer attention to the asymmetries and encounters between Europe's fluctuating cores and peripheries.