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Infidels, Turks and Women: South Slavs in the German Mind, ca.1400-1600
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Infidels, Turks and Women: South Slavs in the German Mind, ca.1400-1600

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This study examines the way in which late medieval and early modern Germans envisioned the Balkan Slavic peoples. It deals with mental categories, such as images, perceptions, and attitudes, which the German-speaking subjects of the Holy Empire gradually developed during their increasingly frequent contacts with the Balkans in the period between 1400 and 1600. During that time span the Germans were constructing their own type of negative self-identification that served as a grid through which information about other peoples was processed. The closer definition of that grid and the types of images and attitudes produced by the encounter and bequeathed to modern Germans and, indeed, to the rest of Western Europe is one of the main goals of the book.

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MORE INFO
Format
Paperback
Publisher
Peter Lang GmbH
Country
Germany
Date
1 July 1997
Pages
335
ISBN
9783631314722

This study examines the way in which late medieval and early modern Germans envisioned the Balkan Slavic peoples. It deals with mental categories, such as images, perceptions, and attitudes, which the German-speaking subjects of the Holy Empire gradually developed during their increasingly frequent contacts with the Balkans in the period between 1400 and 1600. During that time span the Germans were constructing their own type of negative self-identification that served as a grid through which information about other peoples was processed. The closer definition of that grid and the types of images and attitudes produced by the encounter and bequeathed to modern Germans and, indeed, to the rest of Western Europe is one of the main goals of the book.

Read More
Format
Paperback
Publisher
Peter Lang GmbH
Country
Germany
Date
1 July 1997
Pages
335
ISBN
9783631314722