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Europe and its Others

Essays on Interperception and Identity

by Paul Gifford (Volume editor) Tessa Hauswedell (Volume editor)
©2010 Conference proceedings VIII, 297 Pages
Series: Cultural Identity Studies, Volume 18

Summary

This volume presents selected proceedings of a conference on ‘Europe and its Others’ held at St Andrews University in 2007. It seeks to explore the collective and cultural persona implied by Europe’s richly diverse gaze upon, and dealings with, non-Europeans, encountered or represented in the course of travel, trade, conquest or cultural exchange – and their gaze-in-return questioning ‘Europe’.
The play of defining ‘interperceptions’ is followed here in a series of essays covering a broad spectrum of imaginative writings, film, history and culture theory produced in many European languages.
Bringing together specialists in all these fields, this volume scans the unseen processes that the early twenty-first century has come to discern in identity formation: the role of gender as a paradigmatic signifier of Otherness; the narrating of history and memory; the role of border zones and marginalities; the hidden grammar of hostility and violence; the bonding effected by shared values and sacralities; public and private spaces of representation; the Other without and the otherness within.
What emerges from this two-way play of reflection is a sense of the tissue of awareness of the cultural identity that is ‘Europe’; and, perhaps, a renewed openness to Europe’s Others.

Details

Pages
VIII, 297
Publication Year
2010
ISBN (Softcover)
9783039119684
Language
English
Keywords
History public spaces hostility border zones memory violence
Published
Oxford, Bern, Berlin, Bruxelles, Frankfurt am Main, New York, Wien, 2010. VIII, 297 pp., 1 ill.

Biographical notes

Paul Gifford (Volume editor) Tessa Hauswedell (Volume editor)

The Editors: Paul Gifford is Buchanan Professor (Emeritus) of French at the University of St Andrews. His specialism lies in twentieth-century literature and thought, in textual genetics and in identity studies. For ten years he directed the Institute of European Cultural Identity Studies at St Andrews. He is currently Visiting Research Fellow with the Girard Foundation at Stanford University. Tessa Hauswedell holds a Ph.D. from the Institute for European Cultural Identity Studies, University of St Andrews. Her thesis, completed in 2009, deals with the question of discursive European identity formation in European cultural journals from 1989 to 2006.

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Title: Europe and its Others