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Digital Horizons I. – Print vs. Online Literary Journals
Posted by László Szabolcs | Permalink | filed under: 2015, Innovations in the Digital Field
Presently, this complex web of texts, people, and relations we call Hungarian literature ranges from the pantheon of reclusive, almost mythical off-the-grid figures of a golden generation, to the ...
The Writers’ Protest at the Paris Salon du livre/ مسيرة الأدباء داخل معرض الكتاب في باريس
Posted by Iman Humaydan | Permalink | filed under: 2015, The Migrants
From its founding in 1981, throughout its entire thirty-two years, the Paris Salon du livre never witnessed a protest by writers, poets, translators or publishing houses. The first such ...
A Leaf Out of the Calendar Publishers’ Book/ Von Kalenderverlagen lernen
Posted by Dirk Rumberg | Permalink | filed under: 2015, Innovations in the Digital Field
Anyone who is interested in digital innovations on the book market will occasionally benefit from looking beyond their own business domain. The music industry is an obvious example (read more here ...
Writing in Space / Die Schrift im Raum / L’Ecriture dans l’espace
Posted by Beat Mazenauer | Permalink | filed under: 2015, Trends in European Contemporary Literature, Innovations in the Digital Field
In the 1990s, hyperfiction pointed new ways into the literary future. Mark Amerika’s Grammatron narrated a Golem story through short text particles, which were interlinked, and offered alternative ...
‘The Annual Hay Party Conference?’ Hay-on-Wye Festival 2015
Posted by Rosie Goldsmith | Permalink | filed under: 2015, Trends in European Contemporary Literature
My annual Hay Party (Conference?) began and ended loudly.
What do the results of the British general election mean for British and European support for the arts?
Posted by Sophie Wardell | Permalink | filed under: 2015, Trends in European Contemporary Literature
There is a tremble on the lips of theatre directors in London. There is a nervous tic in the eye of culture house chief execs, festival managers and freelance curators across the UK. Further afield, ...
The Problem of E-Book Lending in Public Libraries
Posted by Renata Zamida | Permalink | filed under: 2015, Innovations in the Digital Field
Recently, I returned from Riga, where the annual meeting of the European umbrella association of libraries took place.
Writing in Transient Places/ الكتابة في أمكنة عابرة
Posted by Iman Humaydan | Permalink | filed under: 2015, The Migrants
This is the first time that I’ve finished writing a novel since I’ve been living in France. I believed that writing outside of my country would increase my feelings of being no place. But now I am ...
The paradox of digital transformation – the Hungarian case
Posted by László Szabolcs | Permalink | filed under: 2015, Innovations in the Digital Field
A recent visitor to Budapest, the novelist Jonathan Franzen, believes that we are living in a “media-saturated, technology-crazed, apocalypse-haunted historical moment” which constantly gives one the ...
Understanding Austria: on literary criticism, Part 2/ Österreich verstehen: über die Literaturkritik, Teil 2
Posted by Peter Zimmermann | Permalink | filed under: 2015, Trends in European Contemporary Literature
In part one, I explained that in Austria we practically have no professional literary criticism be it good or bad. There are a handful of managers of literary journals or literary shows. Plus, we ...