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         European Culture:     more books (100)
  1. European Culture Since 1848: From Modern to Postmodern and Beyond by James A. Winders, 2001-09-22
  2. Cultures in Conflict: Encounters Between European and Non-European Cultures, 1492-1800 by Urs Bitterli, 1993-06-01
  3. Indo-European Language and Culture: An Introduction (Blackwell Textbooks in Linguistics) by Benjamin W. Fortson, 2009-09-01
  4. The European Culture Area: A Systematic Geography, Fifth Edition by Alexander B. Murphy, Terry G. Jordan-Bychkov, et all 2008-08-28
  5. Encyclopedia of Blacks in European History and Culture [2 volumes] by Eric Martone, 2008-12-08
  6. The Zenith of European Monarchy and its Elites: The Politics of Culture, 1650-1750 (European History in Perspective) by Nicholas Henshall, 2010-03-15
  7. The Culture of the Europeans: From 1800 to the Present by Donald Sassoon, 2006-09-04
  8. Catholic Millenarianism: From Savonarola to the Abbé Grégoire (Millenarianism and Messianism in Early Modern European Culture, Vol. 2; International Archives of the History of Ideas, Vol. 174)
  9. Millenarianism and Messianism in Early Modern European Culture Volume III: The Millenarian Turn: Millenarian Contexts of Science, Politics and Everyday ... internationales d'histoire des idées)
  10. Heresy, Magic and Witchcraft in Early Modern Europe (European Culture and Society) by Gary K. Waite, 2003-09-06
  11. Modernism as a Philosophical Problem: On theDissatisfactions of European High Culture by Robert B. Pippin, 1999-11-01
  12. Neo-Avantgarde and Culture Industry: Essays on European and American Art from 1955 to 1975 (October Books) by Benjamin H. D. Buchloh, 2003-04-01
  13. Postcolonial Approaches to the European Middle Ages: Translating Cultures (Cambridge Studies in Medieval Literature)
  14. Indian Culture and European Trade Goods: The Archeology of the Historic Period in the Western Great Lakes Region by George Irving Quimby, 1970-02-15

1. A Medieval World: European Culture In The Middle Ages
A site devoted to Medieval Europe. Learn about Medieval culture, see images of Medieval art, browse through hundreds of links to other Medieval sites.
http://www.geocities.com/MedievalWorld/
ABOUT MEDIEVAL WORLD This site was designed to make it easier to research Medieval history and culture on the web. The internet is a valuable source of information, but sometimes it is too hard to maneuver through to find what you want. This website began as a collection of links to allow students in my Medieval culture class to access information on the web more easily. It has since expanded to include much more. For descriptions of the different resources available here, look below. The site is continually being expanded and improved upon, so I welcome your comments, questions and suggestions. Direct them to medievalworld@hotmail.com Medieval World is in the process of re-locating to an ad-less host. Until the change is made, many pages will not be updated, and some graphics may stop functioning. After the change-over, all existing Medieval World pages will have links directing the user to the new page. Thanks for your patience!
SITE MAP
Art Gallery

A collection of images of Medieval artwork. Each piece is available in three sizes, and with information about the work and the artist who created it.
Chat Room

A place for people to discuss any aspect of Medieval history or culture.

2. VII Conference European Culture
VII Congreso Cultura Europea VII Conference european culture VII Congrès Culture Européenne VII Kongress Europäische Kultur VII Conference european culture
http://www.unav.es/cee/ingles2.html
Biblioteca Consulta de Calificaciones Mapa del campus Mapa del web Programas Masters VII Congreso Cultura Europea
VII Conference European Culture
Deutsche Fassung

    VII Conference European Culture
    Scientific Advisory Board
    Sections Scientific Programme Papers ... Contact

    We require your support for the
    Solidarity Fund

    On behalf of the Centre for European Studies of the University of Navarra, in the year of its 50 th anniversary , we have pleasure in inviting you to participate in the
      VII CONFERENCE ‘EUROPEAN CULTURE’

    which will be held in Pamplona from 23rd to 26th October 2002. We would also like to invite you to
    In the previous Conferences "European Culture", cultural managers, urban planners, philosophers, architects, political experts, philologists, journalists, biologists, educators, computer experts, ethnologists and anthropologists, sociologists and economists from 40 countries of the five continents have taken part. And also sculptors, such as Eduardo Chillida, writers or film-makers, such as Krzysztof Zanussi. Obviously, this Conference is multidisciplinary and international: a great forum of dialogue. Accompanied with a cultural programme: concerts, theatre, popular culture, exhibitions. This VIIth edition takes place in the year in which the University of Navarra celebrates its 50th Anniversary. Therefore, one of the main topics of the Conference is the reflection on the contribution of the Universities to the European Culture. Sections Main Sections 1. Globalisation and Culture(s): Myth and Reality

3. ECC : L'Europe De La Coopération Culturelle - The Europe Of Cultural Co-operati
NAT New Age Technology- è una web agency che offre servizi Informatici integrati
http://culture.coe.fr/
Le site de la Coopération culturelle du Conseil de l'Europe a changé d'adresse : http://www.coe.int/T/F/Coopération_culturelle/ The Web site of Cultural Co-operation of the Council of Europe has a new address: http://www.coe.int/t/e/Cultural_Co-operation/

4. Muslim Spain And European Culture
Muslim Spain and european culture. When you think of european culture, oneof the first things that may come to your mind is the renaissance.
http://www.xmission.com/~dderhak/index/moors.htm
Muslim Spain and European Culture ©1995-2000 Dean Derhak W hen you think of European culture, one of the first things that may come to your mind is the renaissance. Many of the roots of European culture can be traced back to that glorious time of art, science, commerce and architecture. But did you know that long before the renaissance there was a place of humanistic beauty in Muslim Spain? Not only was it artistic, scientific and commercial, but it also exhibited incredible tolerance, imagination and poetry. Moors, as the Spaniards call the Muslims, populated Spain for nearly 700 years. As you'll see, it was their civilization that enlightened Europe and brought it out of the dark ages to usher in the renaissance. Many of their cultural and intellectual influences still live with us today. Way back during the eighth century, Europe was still knee-deep in the Medieval period. That's not the only thing they were knee-deep in. In his book, " The Day The Universe Changed ," the historian James Burke describes how the typical European townspeople lived:

5. A Medieval World: European Culture In The Middle Ages
About Medieval World This site was designed to make it easier toresearch Medieval history and culture on the web. The internet
http://www.geocities.com/MedievalWorld/Main.html
About Medieval World
This site was designed to make it easier to research Medieval history and culture on the web. The internet is a valuable source of information, but sometimes it is too hard to maneuver through to find what you want. The Library contains information about the Middle Ages that I compiled and posted. If you need more information than I provide, explore The Links Castle to find links to other Medieval related sites. The links in the castle are divided by subject.
Currently The Links Castle is the most complete section of the site. I am also working a lot on my Virtual Medieval World
and Medieval Art Gallery . . .check them out! Click on the links above to access the pages.
e-mail to:
medievalworld@hotmail.com
List Prev 5 Previous Random Site ... Dancing Banana is a proud member of the
European History Web Collection
Awards this site has recieved: every 3.6 seconds,
someone dies of hunger, 75% of them are
children under 5.
make a difference, go to:
*thehungersite*
(www.thehungersite.com) and *hitsagainsthunger* (www.hitsagainsthunger.com) every second, nearly two

6. SECL Home Page - University Of Kent
School of european culture and Languages. You are here UKC home secl. Diploma ineuropean culture and Languages. MA in European and Comparative Literary Studies.
http://www.ukc.ac.uk/secl/
text only Search:
all of UKC SECL only
School of European Culture and Languages
You are here: UKC home secl The School has the following subject areas: Comparative Literary Studies French German Italian ... Religious Studies and the English Language Unit and is the base for Humanities students taking European Studies Diploma in European Culture and Languages M.A. in European and Comparative Literary Studies Local Pages (UKC Intranet only) Head of School Prof. Philip Robinson Departmental Officer Maureen Nunn Executive Officer Marlene Fell Address
School of European Culture and Languages
Cornwallis Building
University of Kent at Canterbury
Telephone 01227 764000
Fax 01227 823641
Telex 965449 contact us at secl-contact@ukc.ac.uk Browse: Main UKC Web site sections About the University Studying at Kent Research services Campus on-line

7. Directory Search Results - University Of Kent
School of european culture and Languages. Part of Faculty of Humanities. CornwallisNorth West University of Kent Canterbury Kent CT2 7NF. General enquiries. tel.
http://www.ukc.ac.uk/departments/results.html?action=deptcard&deptid=76

8. Oxford Brookes University Prospectus,European Culture And Society
european culture and Society As part of a joint honours degree, european cultureand Society can be combined with any one of a wide range of subjects.
http://www.brookes.ac.uk/courses/currentug/babsc_joint_eurculsoc.html
European Culture and Society
joint honours- BA or BSc (Hons)
School of Arts and Humanities

Contact: Glenn Archibald
Introduction What does it mean to be a European? What are the common social and cultural ties that bring citizens of the European Union together and what are the traditions and features that distinguish their national and regional identities? This course gives you the opportunity to explore these questions through the study of the contemporary European social and cultural scene, and through learning a European language.
As part of a joint honours degree, European Culture and Society can be combined with any one of a wide range of subjects. Particularly successful combinations are with Anthropology, Business Administration and Management (particularly with an international emphasis), Educational Studies, English Studies, History, History of Art, Marketing Management, Music, Politics, Sociology, Tourism or one of the language courses. Top of Page the course For the first two years of the course you will study a language to a level that will allow you to communicate competently and fluently. The language options are French, German, Italian or Spanish, and you can start from scratch or from GCSE level. Italian can also be taken at post A-level. Students with a good A-level in French, German or Spanish can combine European Culture and Society with the relevant language field.

9. European Culture And Society
european culture and Society Joint Honours BA or BSc (Hons) 3 years' full-timestudy or 4 years if combined with a language The School of Languages Contact
http://www.brookes.ac.uk/courses/2001/ugcourses/babsc_joint_eurculsoc.html
View 2001 Prospectus Course Information Order a Printed Prospectus General Information Schools European Culture and Society
Joint Honours - BA or BSc (Hons)

3 years' full-time study or 4 years if combined with a language
The School of Languages

Contact: Linda Betteridge +44 (0) 1865 483720
Introduction
What does it mean to be a European? What are the common social and cultural ties that bring citizens of the European Union together and what are the traditions and features that distinguish their national and regional identities? This course gives you the opportunity to explore these questions through the study of the contemporary European social and cultural scene, and through learning a European language.
As part of a joint honours degree, European Culture and Society can be combined with any one of a wide range of subjects. Particularly successful combinations are with Anthropology, Business Administration and Management (particularly with an international emphasis), Educational Studies, English Studies, History, History of Art, Marketing Management, Music, Politics, Sociology, Tourism or one of the language courses.

10. ::::: DFP INTERNATIONAL :::::

http://www.european-culture.it/

11. Museum Der Europäischen Kulturen - Museum Of European Cultures
The Museum of Ethnography in Berlin collects and preserves objects of popular culture from the sixteenth century to the present. Established in June 1999 it embraces the merged collections of the Museum of Folklore and the European holdings in the Museum of Ethnology in Berlin.
http://www.museen-berlin.de/mek/e/s.html
Detail from a morality picture-scroll, 14 pictures, painted paper on canvas, Saxony/Berlin(?), c. 1850, 70 x 50 cm
Daguerreotype of a young couple, Hamburg, 1852
Museum of European Cultures
The Museum Europäischer Kulturen (Museum of European Cultures) is an important augmentation to Berlin's museums. Established in June 1999 it embraces the merged collections of the Museum für Volkskunde (Museum of Folklore) and the European holdings in the Museum für Völkerkunde (Museum of Ethnology) in Berlin.
The concept of a museum of the history of European cultures complies with the present political situation: museums are endeavoured to play their role within the growing convergence of the European community. In its future collecting activity, research projects and exhibitions the Museum of European Cultures will trace cultural phenomena common to all of European lands and to specify their particular ethnic, regional and national characteristics.
The collection
The Museum's first exhibition, "Cultural Contacts in Europe: the Fascination of Pictures", presents various aspects of the interrelation of European culture, as manifested in the production, dissemination and use of pictures. They demonstrate the reciprocal influence exerted by trade and travel, communication and confrontation. Pictures have traversed the boundaries of time and space, creating ties between the cultures.

12. Slavic And East European Culture And History
Home Slavic East european culture History, East European Gay Culture Pageby Kevin Moss Includes literature, links, and an East European out list.
http://www.slavophilia.net/culture.htm

13. Institute For History And Archives | Historical And Archival Science
Institute Of european culture (a second degree course), Profile. TheInstitute for european cultures (IEC) is an independent, nonprofit
http://www.rsuh.ru/english/education/Institute_of_European_Culture/

Institute for History and Archives
Institute of Economics, Management and Law Cultural Anthropology Institute Institute of Psychology ... Russian-Swedish Research and Study Centre
Institute Of European Culture
(a second degree course)
Profile
The Institute for European Cultures (IEC) is an independent, non-profit institution of higher education which is involved in both research and teaching. It offers a supplementary course of study in "European Cultures" to students of the humanities. The IEC was founded in the autumn of 1995. In September 1996, teaching began. The foundation and development of the institute were a French-Russian-German project which was carried out as a part of the European Union's TEMPUS program for reform in Eastern European higher education.The three institutions which founded the IEC are: Russian State University for the Humanities (Moscow, Russia), Ruhr-University (Bochum, Germany), and the École des Hautes Études en Sciences Sociales (Paris, France). By founding the institute and developing its curriculum, the Russian and Western partners made an important practical contribution to the renewal of Russian higher education in the humanities.

14. Central European Culture
Steven TOTOSY de ZEPETNEK Bibliography for the Study of Central EuropeanCulture. The following bibliography published online is
http://clcwebjournal.lib.purdue.edu/library/centraleuropeanculture(bibliography)
CLCWeb: Comparative Literature and Culture: A WWWeb Journal ISSN 1481-4374
CLCWeb Library of Research and Information

Purdue University Press

Steven TOTOSY de ZEPETNEK
Bibliography for the Study of Central European Culture Comparative Central European Culture Books in Comparative Cultural Studies
http://www.thepress.purdue.edu/series/compstudies.asp http://clcwebjournal.lib.purdue.edu/ccs-purdue.html After the Fall. Thematic Issue Media Studies Journal The Emergence of East Central European Parliaments: The First Steps. Budapest: Hungarian Centre for Democracy Studies, 1994. Altermatt, Urs. Imagined Communities: Reflection on the Origin and Spread of Nationalism. London: Verso, 1991. Antohi, Sorin, and Vladimir Tismaneanu, eds. Between Past and Future: The Revolutions of 1989 and Their Aftermath. Budapest: Central European UP, 2000. Arens, Katherine. “Politics, History, and Public Intellectuals in Central Europe after 1989.” Comparative Central European Culture. Arens, Katherine. “Central Europe and the Nationalist Paradigm.”

15. Royal Holloway, University Of London: MA European Culture And Theory (German, Fr
‘Crossing Borders’ MA Programme in european culture and Theory. Departmentsof French, German, Italian and Hispanic Studies. MA european culture and Theory.
http://www1.rhbnc.ac.uk/German/Postgrad/ModLangsMA.html
Departments of French, German, Italian and Hispanic Studies The existing MA European Literary and Cultural Studies will be replaced from 2001-2 by a new Languages MA Programme, Crossing Borders: MA Programme in European Culture and Theory . This incorporates some of the existing MA, along with new courses, and offers more extensive provision in Hispanic Studies, and in theory and philosophy. The opportunity also exists to take modules from the new MA Holocaust Studies The Programme Consists of the following 5 MAs. Students are permitted to take two modules (two half units or one full unit) outside their main Course from any part of the Programme, subject to possession, where necessary, of requisite language skills, and to timetabling constraints.
MA European Culture and Theory
MA French Literary and Cultural Studies
  • Fictions of Gender in the Nineteenth century Language and Textuality: Critical Practices The Representation of Popular Culture in 19th and 20th century France The City Memory, Space and Identity in Contemporary French Culture Fiction and Experience Roland Barthes Literary Bilingualism Twentieth-century avant-gardes Autobiography Poetry, Prose and Representation

16. Indo-European Culture

http://www.utexas.edu/cola/depts/lrc/iedocctr/ie-culture/ie-culture.html

LRC

IE Documentation

Center
IE Documentation Center
The University of Texas at Austin
IE Culture IE Languages
IE Linguistics

IE Texts

Links List
    Indo-European Culture
    Indo-European culture includes what we know about how people who spoke an IE language over a period of more than four thousand years organized themselves, what institutions they had, and what kinds of material culture their lifestyle presupposed. For example, because of the words that we can reconstruct for Proto-Indo-European, we assume that they ate fish, knew about horses, had domesticated animals such as sheep, goats, and larger cattle, and had extended families organized around a patriarch. Counting and Numerals Religion and World View Writing and Scripts History, Records of Deeds Occupations, Economy, Land Control Laws, Legal Texts School Texts, Tutors Musical Instruments, Singers, Musical Notation Languages, Language, Text Genre Natural Phenomena Sickness, Healing, Rituals Plant and Animal Husbandry, Viticulture Crafts, Clothing, Shelter, Metals, Tools, Transportation

17. Conference: Shakespeare In European Culture, Basel
. Shakespeare in european culture (1418 November 2001, University of Basel) Conferenceproceedings programme - organisation - abstracts and papers - pictures
http://www.unibas.ch/shine/baselconf.htm
Shakespeare in European Culture
(14-18 November 2001, University of Basel)
Conference proceedings:
programme
organisation abstracts and papers pictures ... reviews
reviews:
Balz Engler:
Ton Hoenselaars and Paul Franssen. THE STAPLE OF NEWS - II Update on the Shakespeare Industry.
programme
organisation abstracts and papers pictures ... reviews
programme

In 1984 five quality newspapers in five European countries - Lire, El Pais, La Stampa, Die Zeit, and The Times - made the playful experiment of establishing a European Literary Community. They asked their readers for the names of the most important European writers. The results were clear: the French, the Spanish, the Italians and the Germans chose Shakespeare. Only the British preferred Dante - the rules of the poll barred the naming of writers from one's own country.
Shakespeare's importance for European culture is also documented by his influence, since the late eighteenth century, on national literatures, by the many translations and adaptations made, by the frequency of Shakespeare productions on the European stage, and by how Shakespeare has become an icon for poetic genius.

18. ShinE: Shakespeare In European Culture - Criticism, Research Material, Sources,

http://www.unibas.ch/shine/
if your browser does not allow frames, try: http://www.unibas.ch/shine/linksframe.html. WWilliam Shakespeare: sources, adaptations in art, literature, theatre, music, film, popular culture. Critical essays to individual works. education, teaching material, lesson plans. Macbeth, Lear, Hamlet, Othello, Timon of Athens, Titus Andronicus, Romeo and Juliet, Julius Caesar, Antony and Cleopatra, Coriolanus, Henry VIII, Richard III, King John, Twelfth Night, A Midsummer Night's Dream, The Tempest, Two Gentlemen of Verona, The Winter's Tale, The Merchant of Venice, As You Like It, Cymbeline, Measure for Measure, Troilus and Cressida, Much Ado about nothing, etc.

19. The Ash Tree In Indo-European Culture
The Ash Tree In Indoeuropean culture. Mankind Quarterly, Volume XXXII, Number 4,Summer 1992, pp. 323-336. Darl J. Dumont. Ash Tree in Indo-european culture (*).
http://www.musaios.com/ash.htm
The Ash Tree In Indo-European Culture
Mankind Quarterly , Volume XXXII, Number 4, Summer 1992, pp. 323-336.
Darl J. Dumont
The Musaios Project
ABSTRACT:
Many species of Fraxinus, the ash tree, exude a sugary substance which the ancient Greeks called , i.e. honey. This substance was harvested commercially until the early part of this century, and is found on Fraxinus excelsior in northern Europe and Fraxinus ornus in the mountains of Greece. This fact sheds light on certain themes in classical literature - the idea of a golden age when men ate acorns and honey that dripped from trees, the idea that bees collect honey from the leaves and branches of trees, and that ash tree nymphs were nurses of the infant Zeus in the Cretan cave of Dicte. (They fed him honey). Also, a new etymology of the Greek word for ash tree is proposed in light of these connections. In Norse mythology certain details of the description of Yggdrasil, the world ash, also can be explained by the sugary property of ash trees. It is felt to rain honey on the world, and mead is said to flow in its branches. Again in Sanskrit literature certain beliefs are found which parallel the Greek and Norse ideas, for instance that honey rains down upon the world from the skies. Certain things that are said about the divine intoxicant

20. MA In European Culture, UCL
Go to UCL homepage. MA in european culture. Home About Master's DoctoratesStaff Events Admissions Resources This interdisciplinary
http://www.ucl.ac.uk/ces/programmes/culture.htm
MA in European Culture
Home About Master's Doctorates ... Resources This interdisciplinary degree allows the investigation, in core and optional courses, of diverse aspects of literature, cinema, history of art, and cultural history. The programme is designed for students who wish to pursue a wide range of interests within a flexible combination of core and optional courses.
Five pathways are available:
Cultural Studies

European Cultural Studies

European Literature and History

Cultural Studies (Research)
...
European Literature (Research)
These pathways are outlined below.
Pathway 1: Cultural Studies
The pathway aims to give graduates the means to pursue a programme of interdisciplinary study. It encourages students to combine the study of topics in cultural studies, literature, and film, with cultural, social and historical theory, and with optional courses on novels, plays, poetry, cinema, the history of art, and cultural history.
All students take a compulsory core course on 'Topics in Cultural Studies', together with a flexible combination of core courses. In this way, graduates can tailor the pathway to suit their own aptitudes and interests. They may also replace one component of a core course with an optional course.

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