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Zaur T. Gasimov

    Militär schreibt Geschichte
    Kampf um Wort und Schrift
    Oswald Spengler als europäisches Phänomen
    • 2013

      There was hardly another German author from the first half of the 20th century who was quoted, reviewed and criticized so often in the time immediately after World War I as the philosopher of culture and history Oswald Spengler (1880-1936). The contributions in this volume represent the first systematic look at the phenomenon of the many ways in which Spengler´s philosophy was “transferred” in Europe between the two world wars. They investigate the deep impact of the various levels of his literary reception in Western, Eastern and Southern Europe.

      Oswald Spengler als europäisches Phänomen
    • 2012

      Kampf um Wort und Schrift

      Russifizierung in Osteuropa im 19.-20. Jahrhundert

      • 213 pages
      • 8 hours of reading

      Since the beginning of the Modern Age, the Principality of Moscow was eager to expand toward the West and South of Europe. During the Romanov Dynasty Russia included broad swaths of populations that did not speak Russian and even had various different religions. After Poland was divided up and the Caucasus and parts of Central Asia had been conquered in the 18th and 19th centuries, the Czar obtained full control of very expansive cultural areas, which Russia attempted to assimilate as part of their colonization from the mid-1800s on. Such efforts were also undertaken with the weapons of language: speaking Polish, Ukrainian and Lithuanian was forbidden, and only Russian was allowed in schools and official public offices.

      Kampf um Wort und Schrift