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[ecrea] new issue media studies: Special issue on popular culture and post-socialist societies in east-central and south Eastern Europe
Thu Jan 07 17:05:42 GMT 2016
Mediální studia 02/2015 Special Issue
Mediální studia 02/2015 byla podpořena dotací Odboru médií a audiovize
Ministerstva kultury ČR.
MEDIA STUDIES
SPECIAL ISSUE ON POPULAR CULTURE AND POST-SOCIALIST SOCIETIES IN
EAST-CENTRAL AND SOUTH EASTERN EUROPE
INTRODUCTION
Ondřej Daniel, Tomáš Kavka, Jakub Machek (Charles University in Prague,
Metropolitan University Prague):
Popular Culture and Post-Socialist Societies in East-Central and South
Eastern Europe PDF
EMAIL: (ondrej.daniel /at/ gmail.com); (tomas.kavka /at/ email.cz); (jakub.m /at/ post.cz)
STUDIES
Gábor Egry, Ágnes Kata Miklós (Institute of Political History, Pázmány
Péter University, Budapest):
An Anti-Communist Revolution of Gastronomy. The Gastronomy Renewal
Movement and Hungarian History PDF
ABSTRACT: The article’s aim is to analyze how parts of the gastronomy
renewal movement in Hungary are connected to nationalist politics of
identity in Hungary. Based on insights from the study of everyday
ethnicity, banal nationalism and comparative memory studies in CEE it
shows how the nationalist anti-communist concept of history that
constitutes a cornerstone of the identity of the right is in herent in
the gastronomy movement. It is a-historic and manifestly mythici zing,
finding the lowest point of gastronomy history in the Kádár-era, a
period also excluded from national history in the great narrative of the
right. This adjustment enables the movement to overturn existing
hierarchies and infuse the public discourse with its own language with
the help of politics but at the price of obligatorily lending its
support to political PR action that contradicts its own promoted values.
EMAIL: (egrygabor /at/ freemail.hu); (miklos.kata /at/ villanyi.avf.hu)
Lucie Kořínková (Institute of Czech Literature of the Czech Academy of
Sciences of the Czech Republic):
The Changes of (not merely) Practical Woman and Emancipation of a Hobby
Magazine PDF
ABSTRACT: The study is based on analysing Praktická žena, a popular
women’s magazine that was successful enough to survive the “times of
transformation” on the Czechoslovak media market in the 1990s. It is
focused on the relationship between the content of the magazine and the
official ideology of the 1980s, defining women’s role in the society of
that time, women’s everyday life problems and social changes after 1989.
The text follows the development of Praktická žena as an ideologically
controlled “life style” magazine of the socialist era to the hobby
magazine of the present, and deals with the changing evaluating of DIY
activities, such as home making of clothes and interior decoration, in
the Czechoslovak society.
EMAIL: (korinkova /at/ ucl.cas.cz)
Eva Schäffler (University of Salzburg):
Reflections of gender and sexuality in the eastern German magazine
Superillu PDF
ABSTRACT: The paper offers a historical analysis of the discourse on
eastern German gender and sexuality in the 1990s. As a primary source,
it uses Superillu Magazine, which has existed from 1990 until today and
explicitly targets an eastern German audience. First, Superillu’s
reflections of gender and sexuality can be described as an example of
how certain attitudes in this field (e.g. towards liberal sexual
behaviour or towards working women) have continued to exist beyond
socialism. Second, a comparison of Superillu’s reflections of gender and
sexuality in the 1990s with the results of contemporary sociological
research in this field shows that these discourses did only partly
correspond to each other. Altogether, the (comparative) analysis of
Superillu opens up new vistas on discourses on gender and sexuality in
the 1990s and thus helps to historicize one aspect of eastern Germany’s
very recent past.
EMAIL: (eva.schaeffler /at/ gmail.com)
Irena Šentevska (Independent researcher):
“Turbo folk rules!”: Turbo-Folk, Chalga and the new elites of the
post-socialist Balkans PDF
ABSTRACT: This paper addresses the role of (neo) folk music industry in
the symbolic divisions and identity ‘reshaping’ (national and cultural)
of the post-socialist Balkans, with an emphasis on official policies and
popular attitudes in two countries, Serbia and Bulgaria. Turbo-folk and
chalga, both colloquial but widely adopted terms for ‘modernized folk
music’, may be perceived as two names of (more or less) the same
phenomenon, which has many counterparts and local varieties throughout
the world. The field of popular culture in its ‘post-socialist’
discursive framework is all too often excluded from academic
considerations, in spite of its power and efficiency in forging,
adopting and disseminating the ideological stereotypes underlying the
deep social divisions and ethnic conflicts (not only) in the Balkans.
This paper argues that both for its overwhelming presence in the lives
of ‘ordinary people’, and for its associations with the national culture
and identity, folk music is subject to exceptionally intense processes
of manipulation, according to the ideological, cultural and economic
(political) interests of the current elites – thus becoming a powerful
and malignant vehicle of symbolic divisions on both national and
international scales – in spite of (or perhaps due to) its festive and
Dyonisian veneer, probably nowhere so eagerly exploited as in the Balkans.
EMAIL: (irenasentevska /at/ gmail.com)
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