Titre | Avant-propos - La langue et la littérature bulgares de 1989 à 2009 : Libération, expérimentation, transgression | |
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Auteur | Jack Feuillet, Marie Vrinat-Nikolov | |
Revue | Revue des Etudes Slaves | |
Numéro | Vol. 81, no 2-3, 2010 La Bulgarie : du communisme à l'Union européenne Langue, littérature, médias sous la direction de Jack FEUILLET et Marie VRINAT-NIKOLOV | |
Rubrique / Thématique | La Bulgarie : du communisme à l'Union européenne. Langue, littérature, médias |
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Page | 185-188 | |
Résumé anglais | Language and Literature in Bułgaria from 1989 to 2009. Liberation, Experimentation and Disobedience. Although many observers used to believe that the communist government would last forever, in spite of its visible fading away, twenty years have already passed since its collapse, once deprived of the support of its soviet 'elder brother'. As a resuit of the changes, a new Bułgaria is born after forty- five years of 'lethargy', a metaphor created by the Monk Paisij of Hilendar in 1762 in his History ofSlavs and Bulgarians. The country now goes through a long and hard period of 'transition' which is another long-lasting image in Bułgaria. Once released from censorship and self- censorship, from ideology and the strangle- hold of the communist party on cultural life, both language and literature disclosed in Bułgaria a dynamie and changing picture, not always easy to understand. Twenty years, however, represent a long enough period to be able to give a first review and to detect a periodization of change, thanks to articles written by Bulgarian and French scholars : Plamen Dojnov ( «Bulgarian literature after 1989 : orientation of the debates, biased debates»), Violeta Deceva («Fragmentation of the self : the new Bulgarian drama after 1989») and Marie Vrinat-Nikolov («Remem- brance of 1989 and post-communist literature : how to drown out the deafening silences of History») concerning literary process ; Nadege Ragara («Bułgaria 's State Security files : Unfolding socialism's multiple tempo- ralities») concerning the files ; Vladko Murdarov («How the literary norms were ruined in 20 years (twenty examples)», Snejana Gadjeva («Turkisms in the « liberat- ed» Bulgarian language : a source of neo- logy»), Gueorgui Armianov («Slang and linguistic transformations in Bułgaria after 1989») and Krasimir Stojanov («The linguistic challenges of the discourse of Bulgarian masš media after the changes of 1989») about the changes that occurred in Bulgarian language. | |
Article en ligne | https://www.persee.fr/doc/slave_0080-2557_2010_num_81_2_8045 |