“His ascent to cultural superstardom has been fuelled by his comic talent, but jokes are a serious business for Slavoj Žižek“. Article (c) THE GUARDIAN, 2012
Slavoj Žižek’s jokes
Posted in Uncategorized with tags humor, jokes, philosophy, Slavoj Žižek, Slovenia on 3 February 2012 by delclem“The Suffering Olympics”
Posted in Uncategorized with tags Central Europe, genocide, Hitler, Holocaust, memory politics, Soviet Union, Stalin on 2 February 2012 by delclem“The ‘double genocide’ wars that pit Stalin’s crimes against Hitler’s are raging in wide swathes of Europe and every now and again along comes a gust from the past to stoke them.” Commentary by Robert Cohen (c) NYT, 2012; illustration by Gianpaolo Pagni.
New film
Posted in Uncategorized with tags film, Germany, trailer, United Kingdom, W.G.Sebald on 1 February 2012 by delclemAdaptation of W.G. Sebald’s The Rings of Saturn.
Eco: ‘It’s culture, not war, that cements European identity’
Posted in Uncategorized with tags culture, Europe, interview, Italy, Umberto Eco on 31 January 2012 by delclemThe writer and semiologist Umberto Eco advocates a sexual revolution to make us all ‘European’. Interview by Gianni Riotti, La Stampa;
English (c) THE GUARDIAN, 2012; photo: Sarah Lee
Schubert drama
Posted in Uncategorized on 30 January 2012 by delclem
“Every year the life of a famous Viennese persona is dramatised at Schauspielhaus theatre.
Following on from Sigmund Freud, Robert Musil and Bruno Kreisky, this year’s production, Winterwanderung (A winter walk), traces the life of the composer Franz Schubert, famous amongst other things for his lieder.”
Text (c) wieninternational.at, 2012
“My weekend at the ‘Hague Hilton’”
Posted in Uncategorized with tags ICTY, International Criminal Court, Netherlands, photography, prison, The Hague, war crimes, yugoslavia on 28 January 2012 by delclem“As I entered, the first journalist ever allowed to report from inside, I had butterflies in my stomach. For I am a prisoner of my past. Some of the people detained here were accused of crimes against members of my family. We lived through the siege of Sarajevo.”
Photographer’s blog (c) REUTERS by Damir Sagolj who took pictures in the war crimes unit of the prison in The Hague.
The British Schindler
Posted in Uncategorized with tags Czechoslovakia, Fim, Great Britain, Holocaust, Joe Schlesinger, Nicholas Winton, Schindler on 27 January 2012 by delclem“In 1938, twenty-nine-year-old Sir Nicholas Winton was preparing to take a vacation when he received a call from a friend who told him that he was leaving for Prague and needed his help. (…) Winton decided to take action and by September 1939, he managed to arrange visas and admission to British families for nearly 700 Central European mostly Jewish children. (…) Fifty years later, his wife found a scrapbook full of documents and transport plans….
Joe Schlesinger, a CBC reporter and one of the rescued children, is the guide in the documentary who presents not only how Winton’s act changed his life, but also how it continues to influence the lives of thousands of others worldwide.”
(on the occasion of Holocaust Memorial Day 2012)
Belfast “peace walls”
Posted in Uncategorized with tags Belfast, Central Europe, peace wall, photos, sectarian violence on 24 January 2012 by delclemBelfast is probably the most “Central European” place on the Isles…
“Antonio Olmos photographs the walls built across Northern Ireland’s capital city as a means of defusing sectarian tension. There are 99 of them, dividing nationalist Catholic neighbourhoods from loyalist Protestant ones. Some of the walls date from the early years of the Troubles, but an estimated one-third have gone up since the IRA ceasefire in 1994. Now, ‘peace gates’ are being opened in some walls in an attempt to foster greater links between communities.”
(c) THE GUARDIAN/OBSERVER, 2012
> SLIDE SHOW (photos)







