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The Alphabet of Discord : the Ideologization of Writing Systems on the Balkans since the Breakup of Multiethnic Empires /

What is the relationship between writing systems and nationalism? How can different alphabets coexist in the same country? What is the destiny of the Cyrillic alphabet in Europe? Giustina Selvelli's original work provides detailed answers to these far-reaching and potentially divisive questions...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Clasificación:Libro Electrónico
Autor principal: Selvelli, Giustina (Autor)
Otros Autores: Keil, Soeren, Dzankic, Jelena
Formato: Electrónico eBook
Idioma:Inglés
Publicado: Berlin : Ibidem Verlag, 2021.
Colección:Balkan politics and society.
Temas:
Acceso en línea:Texto completo
Tabla de Contenidos:
  • Intro
  • PREFACE
  • ILLUSTRATIONS
  • 1. INTRODUCTION
  • 1.1 The Balkan space between problems of multiplicity and claims of homogeneity
  • 1.2 The role of writing and of the "Other" in the national discourse
  • 1.3 Methodological considerations: sources and approaches
  • 1.4 Semiotic and relational aspects of alphabets and nationalism
  • SECTION I. ALPHABETIC DISPUTES OF THE 1920s AND 1930s IN BULGARIA
  • 2. THE RECEPTION OF THE ABECEDAR PRIMER (1925) IN BULGARIA
  • 2.1 Issues related to the adoption of new writing systems
  • 2.2 Post-imperial national identity dynamics
  • 2.3 The situation in Aegean Macedonia after World War I
  • 2.4 The publication of the Abecedar (1925)
  • 2.5 Some peculiarities related to the characters of the Abecedar
  • 2.6 The "involvement" of Cyril and Methodius
  • 2.7 Conclusions: the fate of the Abecedar after 1925
  • 3. THE "LATINIZATION" IDEOLOGY AND THE BULGARIAN DEBATES
  • 3.1 Introduction: issues of script change
  • 3.2 The Latinization ideology in the Soviet Union
  • 3.3 The Latin alphabet as a "modernizing" tool in the Balkans
  • 3.4 The positions in support of Latinization in Bulgaria
  • 3.5 The positions in defense of Cyrillic: contextual and internal factors
  • 3.6 Defensive and symbolic motivations rejecting Latinization
  • 3.7 Technical imperfections of the Latin alphabet
  • 3.8 Conclusions: the national character of the alphabet
  • 4. THE CONTRAST BETWEEN ARABIC AND LATIN SCRIPTS AMONG THE BULGARIAN TURKS
  • 4.1 The impact of the Eurasian alphabet reforms on Turkey
  • 4.2 The ambivalent status of the Latin alphabet in Bulgaria
  • 4.3 Language and script restrictions for the Turks of Bulgaria
  • 4.4 Conclusions: the disruption of writing practices
  • SECTION II. SCRIPT ISSUES IN THE "SERBO-CROATIAN TERRITORIES" IN THE INTERWAR PERIOD
  • 5. SERBO-CROATIAN IN TWO SCRIPTS: DIGRAPHIA, "ALPHABET SYNTHESIS" AND BILITERACY
  • 5.1 Linguistic and historical introduction
  • 5.2 Post-war alphabet ideologies: four parallel trends
  • 5.3 The influence of the "pro-Latinization" factors
  • 5.4 The first proposals of "alphabet synthesis" appearing in Život i rad
  • 5.5 The "Yugoslav alphabet" by Pavle Ž. Radivojević
  • 5.6 Reactions to the "mixed alphabet" proposals
  • 5.7 Živaljević's rejection of the Yugoslav alphabet and Trivunac's defense of Cyrillic
  • 5.8 Conclusions: the developments of the alphabet question in Yugoslavia
  • 6. CYRILLIC AT WAR: SCRIPT IDEOLO-GIES IN THE INDEPENDENT STATE OF CROATIA, 1941-1945
  • 6.1 From unitarian ideologies to assertions of difference in the language field
  • 6.2 The development of the language situation before the NDH
  • 6.3 "Cyrillicide" in the Independent State of Croatia
  • 6.4 Writing ideologies between purism and denialism
  • 6.5 The "Orientality" of the Serbs and the role of the Glagolitic alphabet