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         European Culture:     more books (100)
  1. Zionist Culture and West European Jewry Before the First World War by Michael Berkowitz, 1996-09-16
  2. European Political Cultures: Conflict or Convergence? by Roger Eatwell, 1997-08-20
  3. Russian and East European Books and Manuscripts in the United States: Proceedings of a Conference in Honor of the Fiftieth Anniversary of the Bakhmeteff ... and East European History and Culture
  4. Recurrent themes and sequences in North American Indian-European culture contact (Transactions of the American Philosophical Society) by Edward McM Larrabee, 1976
  5. The Europeans: A Geography of People, Culture, and Environment.(by Robert C. Ostergren and John G. Rice)(Book Review) : An article from: The Geographical Review by John Western, 2005-01-01
  6. Shifting Grounds: Experiments in Doing Ethnography (Anthropological Journal on European Cultures)
  7. Cross Currents, Number 10: A Yearbook of Central European Culture (Cross Currents)
  8. Crime Scenes. Detective Narratives in European Culture since 1945. (Internationale Forschungen zur Allgemeinen und Vergleichenden Literaturwissenschaft ... & Vergleichenden Literaturwissenschaft)
  9. The Culture of Reconstruction: European Literature Thought and Film 1945 1950
  10. The French Revolution: Class War or Culture Clash (Studies in European History (New York, N.Y.).) by T. C. W. Blanning, 1998-06
  11. The Romantic Poetess: European Culture, Politics, and Gender, 1820-1840 (Becoming Modern: New Nineteenth-Century Studies) by Patrick Vincent, 2004-10-22
  12. If You've Seen One, You've Seen the Mall: EUROPEANS AND AMERICAN MASS CULTURE by Rob Kroes, 1996-05-01
  13. Wissenschaft aus Kunst: Die Entstehung der modernen deutschen Geschichtsschreibung 1760-1860 (European cultures) by Daniel Fulda, 1996
  14. Organizational Culture (European Journal of Work and Organizational Psychology) by Karel De Witte, 2000-05-09

61. Leon Krier European Culture In The 21st Century
european culture in the 21st Century. by LÉON KRIER. European Parliament, DirectorateGeneralfor Research, Document EDUC 107 EN Part 2 (2001), pages 31-33.
http://applied.math.utsa.edu/krier/european.html

62. RealMagick Article: Origins Of The Celts By Michael Wangbickler
Michael Wangbickler introduces the Hallstatt culture and its successor, that of La T¨ne, with some comment on earlier european cultures.
http://realmagick.com/articles/32/1032.html
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Origins of the Celts [credits]
by Michael Wangbickler
Two new groups of people emerge in Central Europe during the late Neolithic (New Stone Age) period, one certainly immigrant. Each group may be distinguished archaeologically by characteristic artifacts found in their respective burial sites. One was a Bell Beaker or drinking vessel. We now refer to this group as the Beaker folk. There is still some doubt as to the origins of the Beaker folk, some say Iberia, and some say Central Europe itself. Never-the-less it is believed that they emerge as an independent cultural group around 3000 B.C.E.. The second group is characterized by a perforated battle-axe of stone. Similarly, we now refer to this group as the Battle-Axe folk. Evidence points towards origins in the steppe-lands of southern Russia, between the Caucasus and the Carpathian mountains. The Battle-Axe folk may be attributed with the initial spread of the Indo-European group of languages. (see diagram) The Indo-European group of languages encompasses most of those current in present-day Europe. In Central Europe the Beaker folk and Battle-Axe folk fused to become one European people. Shortly thereafter began the Bronze Age in Europe. It is unclear whether the arrival of the two groups influenced the arrival of the Bronze Age or not. Many think that contact with the Mediterranean and beyond may have influenced this.

63. §14. American Faith And European Culture. XII. Henry James. Vol. 17. Later Nati
Reference Cambridge History Later National Literature, Part II Henry James American Faith and european culture. American Faith and european culture.
http://www.bartleby.com/227/0514.html
Select Search All Bartleby.com All Reference Columbia Encyclopedia World History Encyclopedia Cultural Literacy World Factbook Columbia Gazetteer American Heritage Coll. Dictionary Roget's Thesauri Roget's II: Thesaurus Roget's Int'l Thesaurus Quotations Bartlett's Quotations Columbia Quotations Simpson's Quotations Respectfully Quoted English Usage Modern Usage American English Fowler's King's English Strunk's Style Mencken's Language Cambridge History The King James Bible Oxford Shakespeare Gray's Anatomy Farmer's Cookbook Post's Etiquette Bulfinch's Mythology Frazer's Golden Bough All Verse Anthologies Dickinson, E. Eliot, T.S. Frost, R. Hopkins, G.M. Keats, J. Lawrence, D.H. Masters, E.L. Sandburg, C. Sassoon, S. Whitman, W. Wordsworth, W. Yeats, W.B. All Nonfiction Harvard Classics American Essays Einstein's Relativity Grant, U.S. Roosevelt, T. Wells's History Presidential Inaugurals All Fiction Shelf of Fiction Ghost Stories Short Stories Shaw, G.B. Stein, G. Stevenson, R.L. Wells, H.G. Reference Cambridge History Later National Literature, Part II Henry James ... BIBLIOGRAPHIC RECORD
The Cambridge History of English and American Literature in 18 Volumes
VOLUME XVII. Later National Literature, Part II.

64. Catholic World News : Ratzinger Sees European Culture In Decline
Ratzinger sees european culture in decline. Rome, May. 14, 2004 215 PM EST. Ratzingeris just now realizing that there is a decline in european culture
http://www.cwnews.com/news/viewstory.cfm?recnum=29573

65. European Culture Trivia Quizzes And Quiz Questions
learn more about the culture and customs of the Gibraltarian people. Difficult, 24,Feb 26 04, DigitalAngel. 2, A Tendentious Overview of the European Peoples Yanks
http://www.funtrivia.com/dir/2602.html
Home Directory World Cultures : European Cultures Welcome to the World's Largest Trivia Website!
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This is the European Cultures category.
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Category Editors: thejazzkickazz bruyere bloomsby Beatka ... minch
Create: Create a European Cultures Quiz Read Me First
Quizzes Title Difficulty Played Online Author Gibraltar's Culture and Customs
Famed for its Rock, Gibraltar is more than limestone and monkeys! Take this quiz to learn more about the culture and customs of the Gibraltarian people. Difficult Feb 26 04 DigitalAngel A Tendentious Overview of the European Peoples
Yanks are the worst. We steal your cultures, and then dump McDonalds and Gap franchises all through your quaint old cities. Now we make fun of you in FT quizzes... what CHEEK! Easy Dec 16 02 coolupway Gypsy Trivia Here's a chance to get to know the Gypsies....happy acquainting! Tough Sep 09 00 thejazzkickazz Viking Culture Some interesting tidbits on the early period of the Vikings, ca. 750-1000 A.D. Have fun! Difficult Jan 21 01 thejazzkickazz Cultural Tidbits Random acts of cultural trivia!

66. Cultivate Interactive Issue 5: OpenHeritage: Enabling The European Culture Econo
OpenHeritage Enabling the european culture Economy. By GabrieleScali, Flavio Tariffi, Stefano Cuomo, Hub Kockelkorn, Dominique
http://www.cultivate-int.org/issue5/openheritage/
Search Options Help Site Map Cultivate Web Site Search Home Current Issue Index of Back Issues Issue 5 Home ... Misc.
OpenHeritage: Enabling the European Culture Economy
By Gabriele Scali, Flavio Tariffi, Stefano Cuomo, Hub Kockelkorn, Dominique DeLouis and George Mallen - October 2001 OpenHeritage [ ] is a research project funded under the Fifth Framework Programme (Jan 2001 - Dec 2002) aiming to create an IT infrastructure and service to improve access to collections information held by regional museums and galleries. The collections of regionally distributed smaller museums will thus be as attractive and accessible as the larger, better known, museum collections. This "cultural driven" economy could give a significant contribution to the local economic development enabling the enrichment of local touristic and cultural assets.
Overview
It has been pointed out by several surveys that the application of technological solutions to memory institutions in fields such as the multimedia management and valorisation of museum and library collections is failing to express substantive and sustainable economic results for a number of reasons. The main being the lack of a self-supporting economic model for the promotion and exploitation of Cultural Heritage through ICT, and the excessive "technology push" in the use of virtualisation, to the expense of a sound understanding of the global vs. local processes. The result is the improper use of innovation often deployed in an self-referential way.

67. H-Soz-u-Kult / Forum / Anfragen / Romantic Love In European Culture
Anfragen. Romantic love in european culture. 02.04.2003 Geppert, AlexanderCT alexander.geppert at kwinrw.de . Eingangsdatum 03.04.2003 0000.
http://hsozkult.geschichte.hu-berlin.de/forum/type=anfragen&id=308
1 / 1 Anfrage
Romantic love in European culture
Geppert, Alexander CT document.write(String.fromCharCode(60 + 4)) Druckversion
Beitrag versenden
Eingangsdatum: Dear Colleagues, I am doing research on romantic love in European culture, namely the sort of love that includes distance and suffering, sometimes to the extent of death. A commonplace, widespread in low and high culture, asserts that Europeans have developed this type of love, and given it an outstanding role in their system of values, more than any other people in the world, actually exclusively. I want to challenge this assumption, but I would also like to investigate historically how "mixed couples" lived the question of belonging to different European countries or to Europe and other continents. A field of particular interest in this perspective is represented by love relationships between people of different cultures, continents, and religious confessions. Besides novels, essays, newspapers, I would like to take into consideration personal documents, like letters and diaries as well as individual memories. The research deals with the origins of romantic love in the XIX century as a preliminary step, but it will focus on the years 1930-50 as a central period. For comparison with the rest of my material, it would be particularly desirable that the letters had some connection with France. Would you happen to know of the existence of any love letters, both published and unpublished? All comments and suggestions you might possibly have would be much appreciated.

68. Culturelink Network - Culturelink Review
Dossier. Culturelink review, no.27/April 1999 contents - imprint- archive. european culture. An advisory committee of more than
http://www.culturelink.org/review/27/cl27dos.html
home publications review no.27 > dossier network membership members contact ... directories Dossier Culturelink review, no.27/April 1999 - contents imprint archive European Culture An advisory committee of more than fifty representatives of scientific and scholarly institutions and universities from all over Europe encouraged Enrique Banús, Director of the Centre for European Studies of the University of Navarra, to try to realize an unorthodox idea: to fully open the approaches to all the phenomena of European culture - historical and current, theoretical and practical - in order to stimulate the processes of cultural integration of the hitherto divided continent. This effort has so far resulted in a very positive response and several impressive volumes of the proceedings of the first four conferences on 'European Culture'. Some forty topics on the programme of the Fifth Conference covered a wide thematic range and provided a coherent yet flexible framework for a lively participation and fluctuation of the participants. It is difficult to get a full idea of the effects of such an open-design conference, working simultaneously in a number of different thematic sections. There is no doubt, however, that the Fifth Conference on 'European Culture' held in Pamplona, Spain, 28-31 October 1998 showed that this effort was guided by a genuine democratic desire for a new Europe, in the spirit of openness to all European, and not only European, issues.

69. Study Abroad Programme In Modern European Culture - School Of Modern Languages -
Study Abroad Programme in Modern european culture A one semester programme.The programme provides an introduction to the culture
http://www.nottingham.ac.uk/modern-languages/school/iyasem.html

School of Modern Languages
Study Abroad Programme in Modern European Culture
A one semester programme
Students take modules (assessed by essay and/or examination) amounting to 60 credits in the course of the semester, as follows:
Core modules:
Semester 1 (22 September 2003 - 23 January 2004):
Foundations of European Culture (10 credits). Key movements, ideas and people from the Enlightenment to Marx, Nietzsche and Freud.
Semester 2 (26 January 2004 - 11 June 2004):
Moving into Modernity (10 credits). Students look at the movements which characterise European culture in the modern period: Revolution and the avant-garde, culture under Communism, Surrealism, Existentialism, Feminism, Structuralism, Poststructuralism, Postcolonialism, Postmodernism.
Optional modules:
(all at 10 credits unless otherwise specified, and assessed by one essay and/or one examination. Texts of non-English writers studied in English translation).
History and Culture
  • The Transformation of England 1750-1914 (sem 2)
  • The 19th Century Woman (sem 1)
  • Socialism and the rise of the Labour Party (sem 1)
  • Spain in the Twentieth Century (sem 2)
  • Discovery, Empire, Colonies: The Portuguese-speaking world 1500-1750

70. Study Abroad Programme In Modern European Culture - School Of Modern Languages -
Study Abroad Programme in Modern european culture A one year programmefrom September to July. The programme provides an introduction
http://www.nottingham.ac.uk/modern-languages/school/iyayrprog.html

School of Modern Languages
Study Abroad Programme in Modern European Culture
A one year programme from September to July
The programme provides an introduction to the culture of Britain, France, Germany, Austria, Spain, Portugal, Russia and post-Communist Eastern Europe. It offers core modules on the ideas and movements which shaped European culture in modern times and on the emergence of contemporary European culture. The programme includes a range of specialist modules on key aspects of the cultural life and history of the countries studied. Students also have the opportunity to learn a European language other than English from scratch. The programme includes for a small additional cost a week-long study visit to one major European city (from London, Berlin, Paris, Barcelona, St Petersburg) at Easter time. Students follow a mixture of tailor-made modules and modules taken by Nottingham undergraduates. The programme is taught in English. Students take modules (assessed by essay and/or examination) amounting to 120 credits in the course of the year, as follows:

71. Oxford Brookes University
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/2003/babsc_joint_eurculsoc.html!
This page has now moved due to the new structure of our website.
Please update your links or try to inform the owner of the page that brought here. You will be taken to the new page automatically in a few seconds or you can go there immediately using the link below. www.brookes.ac.uk/undergraduate

72. Princeton - Undergraduate Announcement 2003-04 - Program In European Cultural St
Those who do so normally enjoy trying interdisciplinary approaches to the interpretationof the products of european culture, from novels and paintings to
http://www.princeton.edu/pr/catalog/ua/03/177.htm
Princeton University
Undergraduate Announcement, 2003-04 edition prev contents next
Program in European Cultural Studies
Director
Anson Rabinbach
Interdepartmental Committee
Sandra L. Bermann, Comparative Literature
Eduardo Cadava, English
Robert G. Darnton, History
Anthony T. Grafton, History
Michael W. Jennings, Germanic Languages and Literatures
Thomas D. Kaufmann, Art and Archaeology
Anson Rabinbach, History Eileen A. Reeves, Comparative Literature Maurizio Viroli, Politics The program has two purposes: to deepen students' understanding of European civilization and to strengthen their command of cultural interpretation. It brings together faculty and undergraduates from several departments in a common inquiry into the way people order reality, make sense of life, and communicate meaning. In order to reduce those problems to manageable proportions, they are studied in seminars on specific themes in European history, literature, art, and philosophy.
Admission
Course of Study
ECS 209 Cultural Interpretation (also HUM 209) Fall LA An introduction to the theory and practice of cultural interpretation as developed in philosophy, social and political thought, anthropology, and literary criticism. The course will stress the way people organize reality and make sense of life through the use of symbolic systems. Two lectures, one preceptorial.

73. To Be (or Not To Be) Central European: Culture And Politics In 20th Century Cent
To Be (or Not To Be) Central european culture and Politics in 20th Century Centraland Eastern Europe Professor Aleksander Fiut Email xxfiut@filon.filg.uj
http://www.ces.uj.edu.pl/fiut/culture.htm
To Be (or Not To Be) Central European: Culture and Politics in 20th Century Central and Eastern Europe
Professor Aleksander Fiut

E-mail: xxfiut@filon.filg.uj.edu.pl
Course: Elective, 40 classroom hours, 5.5 ECTS points
Time: Autumn semester 2001/02, Wednesdays,13:00-15:15 (class times for 2002/03 will be set by 15 September 2002)
Venue: Lecture room, Rynek Glowny 34
Course Objectives:
The course is addressed to graduate students interested in contemporary Eastern European literature and culture. It is exclusively based on English translations and does not require a knowledge of the Polish language. The course analyses reciprocal relations between literature, sociology, politics and anthropology in order to present various self-portraits of the nations whose cultural identity has been endangered by their historical experience. Since Nazism and communism shook the traditional system of values, many people have been forced once again to ask themselves a question "Who am I?" This search for self-definition is particularly interesting in Eastern Europe as it has led some of its writers to try different artistic and philosophical approaches which elucidate the whole European cultural tradition from a new angle.
Reading list:
General:
1.The Identity in Question ed. by John Rajchman, Routledge, New York and London 1995 (selected essays)

74. Kovac Lab - European Culture In The Global Conflict Of Cultures: A View Of A Bio
european culture in the global conflict of cultures a view of a biologistLadislav Kovác. 4. Evolutionary superiority of european culture.
http://www.fns.uniba.sk/~kbi/kovlab/culture.htm
European culture in the global conflict of cultures: a view of a biologist Summary
The contemporary man has been formed by two distinct evolutions: biological and cultural evolutions. The study of man as a product of biological evolution is the subject of natural sciences, the study of what cultural evolution has made of man and how it has tremendously expanded man's environment is the subject of cultural sciences. At such a "division of labour", to make culture a subject of exploration by biologists may appear an illegitimate intrusion of one of natural sciences into a domain out of its competence. It is not so: culture is deeply rooted in human biology (1). Just as most incisive comprehension of complex biological phenomena is being reached by studying their roots at the elementary, molecular, level (hence, in the domain of physics and chemistry), the deepest insight into cultural phenomena may be achieved by analysing their primary, and essential, biological basis (hence, in the domain of biology).
It is at this biological level that the phenomenon of European culture, its relation to other cultures, and its possible future is being considered in this paper. Culture is a legitimate subject of biological inquiry.

75. Bente Kahan
A JewishNorwegian performing artist, with the production company Teater Dybbuk in Oslo. Focused on conveying Jewish-european culture and history through drama and music.
http://www.bentekahan.no/

76. EUpolitix - European Culture Project 2004-2008 - COM/2003/275
european culture project 20042008 - COM/2003/275. The EU will contribute €30.92million to fund specific european culture projects under this proposal.
http://www.eupolitix.com/EN/Legislation/200309/fed4ba24-ee7f-4d2c-bb8b-9d35199b3
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Login Contact Terms ... Training English Fran§ais European culture project 2004-2008 - COM/2003/275 The EU will contribute €30.92 million to fund specific European culture projects under this proposal. These include a centre for lesser used languages, Mercator information centres, grants to run Nazi concentration camps as historic memorials and other organisations of European cultural interest. Wanting to support culture activities within Europe, Brussels wants to provide the funds via an action programme to run from 2004-2008. Current status: The European Parliament has adopted the Council's common position with amendments. The proposal falls under the ‘codecision’ procedure, under which the Commission proposal must be approved jointly by both the Council and the European Parliament.
Progress 27 May 2003 Commission proposal COM/2003/275/FINAL 2003/0115/COD Bulletin 2003/5/1.4.30
6 November 2003 Parliament opinion single reading: approval with amendment, Bulletin, /2003/11/ 1.4.44 24 November 2003 Council reaches political agreement on common position

77. Rick Steves' Travel News: Experiencing European Culture... In Situ
Roman Holiday. Experiencing european culture…in situ. By Rick Steves.The majestic Via del Corso boulevard is packed with strolling Romans.
http://www.ricksteves.com/news/0202/insitu.htm
Current Travel News Back Issues menu Return Home
Roman Holiday
in situ
By Rick Steves The majestic Via del Corso boulevard is packed with strolling Romans. Tourists are often content to "experience" the art and culture of Europe in museums and on stage. But a true traveler's goal is to be engulfed in a living culture, to enjoy it in situ —the art history term for "on location." Here's a report written in Rome, where my wife, Anne, and I savored the end of the Christmas season. The magic of being "on location" strikes us as we look around. We are the only non-Italians in a boulevard packed with strolling locals. Everyone is making the scene in fancy furs and designer scarves along Via del Corso. Mass en masse. Anne Steves poses for a picture with the pontiff. Buon Anno (Happy New Year) to their pope, and noisy teenagers from Mexico screaming "Viva Meh-hee-ko"—wait for John Paul II to appear from the window of his study overlooking the square. Anne and I stand in the shadow of an Egyptian obelisk that marks the center of the square. It's the same obelisk Peter saw, the day he was crucified here, 2,000 years ago, and the same obelisk medieval pilgrims set their weary sights on as their treks worked up to a Vatican finale.

78. H-SPHERE
european culture Week Ennis, Co.Clare, Ireland - August 2002.
http://euroculture.ennis.ie
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79. European Culture Integration Bridge - Eurografik 2003/2004
bridge, Eurografik 2003/2005 european culture Integration Bridge. Anna Magiera- Curator of the Eurografik 2003/2005 - european culture Integration Bridge.
http://www.triennial.cracow.pl/most_e.php?smtg_sub_cat_id=4&mmenu_id=4

80. Georgian Index -- Alphabetical Site Map
A survey of British and european culture at the heigth of the Georgian Era; including George IV, Princess Charlotte, The Crown Jewels of France and England, Napoleon's Carriage, the evolution of boxing, the tea table, period card games, the evolution of the thoroughbred, period flyfishing, a growing selection of London addresses.
http://www.georgianindex.net/
Use the list below to enter the
Georgian Index
The move finished at last. georgianindex.net
Please notify us of any graphics or links that we forgot to pack. New London Addresses New Finally, the promised Transportation in the City of London!
A
B C ... Z
Search WWW Search www.georgianindex.net
A
About us
Gentlemen's Accouterments
Ladies' Accesories Albany ... Architects
B
Banking Bibliography Biography
  • George IV - in Childhood
  • George IV - Cronies
  • George IV - Mistresses ... Business Index
    C
    Card Party Camelford House Carlton House Carlton House - The Rotunda ...
    Top of Page
    D
    Early Derby winners Docks East India Docks West India Dogs ... Duke's mixture
    E
    East India Docks Egyptian Hall - Bullock's Museum English Crown Jewels Exhibition of Napoleon's Carriage in London ... Expenses and Indices
    F
    Fashionable Hour Fencing - Angelo's Academy Fete for Duke of Wellington Fete for the Glorious Peace (1814) ...
    Top of Page
    G
    Garden Estates in Britain Garden Terminology Gentlemens' Accouterments Gentleman's Occupations ... "Grand Tour"
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