This is what fiction is supposed to do: introduce you to the minds of those you wouldn't ordinarily meet
Monday, March 22, 2010
Ars Aeterna Vol. 1, No. 2 / 2009
Art in Memory, Memory in Art
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TABLE OF CONTENTS
A word from the editor - Alena Smiešková
Interview with Manana Antadze - Mária Kiššová
Folk Tales and Memorial Narratives as Viable Artifacts of Collective Memory - Katarína Školníková
Bringing back the memory: Representations of Wrocław, Lwów, and Szczecin in contemporary Polish culture as examples of reconstructing cultural memory - Agata Strządała
Remembering the Other: creating national mythology in A Passage to India by Edward Forster - Anna Bysiecka-Maciaszek
Twisted Images of Cultural Memory: Paula Rego’s Visual Narrative - Agnieszka Gołda-Derejczyk
The Barak Architekti Studio – Genius Loci - Viktor Šabík
Fictional Memory and the Narrating Mind in J. Coe’s Novel The House of Sleep -Marina Ragachewskaya
The Attempt Was All – the theme of memory in Ian McEwan’s Atonement - Petr Chalupský
Struggling to Remember, Remembering to Struggle: Three Novels by Contemporary Scottish Women Authors - Monika Szuba
‘You Tell Your Secrets and I’ll tell Mine’: the Gold Dust of Memories - Ludmilla Miteva
“We’ll build in sonnets pretty rooms”: Mnemotechnic and John Donne’s La Corona - Noémi M. Najbauer
Memory and Art: The Paradox of Utopianism - David Schauffler
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