DE eng

Search in the Catalogues and Directories

Page: 1 2 3 4 5...7
Hits 1 – 20 of 137

1
W Sejmie : Ślōnskiego języka nie ma, ale może być etnolekt ; In the Polish Parliamentthe Silesian language does not exist, but the Silesian ethnolect may
BASE
Show details
2
Niemieckie zaniechania ; The German minority leadership's resignations from securing this monority's cultural and linguistic rights in postcommunist Poland
BASE
Show details
3
Words in space and time : a historical atlas of language politics in modern Central Europe
Kamusella, Tomasz Dominik. - : Central European University Press, 2021
BASE
Show details
4
The History of Negation in the Languages of Europe and the Mediterranean. Volume II: Patterns and Processes
Breitbarth, Anne; Lucas, Christopher; Willis, David. - : Oxford University Press, 2020
BASE
Show details
5
Codzienność komunikacyjno-językowa na obszarze historycznego Górnego Śląska ; The everyday language use in historical Upper Silesia
Kamusella, Tomasz. - : Narodowa Oficyna Śląska, 2018
BASE
Show details
6
Self-translation in 20th-century Italian and Polish literature: the cases of Luigi Pirandello, Maria Kuncewiczowa and Janusz Głowacki
BASE
Show details
7
'The Prague Exit': representations of East German migration in the official press of the Czechoslovak Communist Party
Abstract: East German migration via Prague in the summer and autumn of 1989 is not discussed in the English-language historiography as an important precondition for the revolutionary changes in Czechoslovakia in 1989. This research examines it and provides an alternative view of Czechoslovak social and political life just before the Velvet Revolution when the ruling Communist Party lost its grip on a regime which they controlled for more than four decades. 'The Prague Exit' analyses the linguistic representations of East German migration via Prague as constructed by the official newspaper of the Czechoslovak Communist Party, Rudé Právo. It explores how ideological language constructions present a minority group, and to what extent it reflected on the overall stability of the Czechoslovak Communist Party. A few core theories of Critical Discourse Analysis were employed to inspect how political and social elites constructed the discourse about the migrants' social identity in the country's press. The general migration narrative is further investigated in The Washington Post and The Times, as these newspapers provided an extensive coverage of the migration. This research found that East Germans were represented negatively because the Party perceived them as a threat to their political power and ideology. The migration narrative changed with time, which indicated a systematic construction of the migration discourse and changing perceptions of the relevance of its threat among the Party members. Their decisions regarding the border control to stop the unwanted migration exposed Party’s ideological instability and resolve just before the Velvet Revolution. Additionally, while the Western press represented East German migrants as vulnerable and mistreated human beings, their reporting was based on counter-ideological stereotypes about systemic differences between the 'East' and the 'West'. The East German migration story was marginal in the wider conflict between socialism and capitalism during the last months of the Cold War, as observed in the press reports. Crucially, the analysis of the unpublished archival documents from the National Archive, the Archive of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, and the Archive of the Security Services, consulted in Prague, the Czech Republic, revealed disparities among the Western and Czechoslovak representation of the migrants. These documents presented the Communist Party members as alert about this migration yet pragmatic, calm and confident in their power to solve it and maintain the status quo - contrary to its self-representation in Rudé Právo or its panicking character, constructed in the Western press. These findings challenge the traditional perceptions of the Cold War history, and, most importantly, it presents East German migration as an unusual agent in the Czechoslovak Velvet Revolution.
Keyword: 1945 on; Albanian languages and literature; Baltic; D839 Post-war History; HX Socialism. Communism. Anarchism; PG Slavic
URL: https://eleanor.lib.gla.ac.uk/record=b3326240
http://theses.gla.ac.uk/30736/1/2017michalovskamphil.pdf
http://theses.gla.ac.uk/30736/
BASE
Hide details
8
Individual phonological attrition in Albanian–English late bilinguals
Tusha, A; Schmid, MS; De Leeuw, E. - : Cambridge University Press (CUP), 2018
BASE
Show details
9
The rise and dynamics of the normative isomorphism of language, nation, and state in Central Europe
Kamusella, Tomasz Dominik. - : Harvard University Press, 2017
BASE
Show details
10
The political expediency of language-making in Central Europe : the case of Czechoslovak
BASE
Show details
11
The idea of a Kosovan language in Yugoslavia's language politics
BASE
Show details
12
A linguistic ethnographic perspective on Kazakhstan’s trinity of languages: language ideologies and identities in a multilingual university community
Wheeler, Louise. - 2017
BASE
Show details
13
The Processing of Parasitic Gaps in Mandarin Chinese
Yan, Le. - : University of Florida, 2017. : University of Florida ( [Gainesville, Fla.] ), 2017
BASE
Show details
14
Describing Linde dictionary of Polishfor retro-digitisation purposes
BASE
Show details
15
Linde’s dictionary of Polish – new retro-digitisation and electronic word index
BASE
Show details
16
Hiob als Intertext. Dostojewskis "Die Bruder Karamasow"
Pattison, George. - : Evangelissche Verlagsanstalt, 2016
BASE
Show details
17
Russian social networks on the web: cohesion and coherence in Vkontakte
BASE
Show details
18
"It is English and there is no Alternative": Intersectionality, Language and Social/Organizational Differentiation of Polish Migrants in the UK
Johansson, M; Sliwa, M. - : Wiley-Blackwell, 2016
BASE
Show details
19
Periodical Literature Bibliometric Analysis: A case study of four International Journals
In: Library Philosophy and Practice (e-journal) (2016)
BASE
Show details
20
Kaj jeszcze konsek godajom po swojimu? ; Where [in Poland] do they still speak in their own languages [other than Polish]?
BASE
Show details

Page: 1 2 3 4 5...7

Catalogues
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
Bibliographies
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
Linked Open Data catalogues
0
Online resources
0
0
0
0
Open access documents
137
0
0
0
0
© 2013 - 2024 Lin|gu|is|tik | Imprint | Privacy Policy | Datenschutzeinstellungen ändern