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My paper will explore the interrelation between past, present and identity, as well as the dynamics of social change in contemporary German and Romanian literature, as exemplified by Jana Hensel’s Zonenkinder (2002) and Ioana Bradea’s Scotch (2010). Both authors belong to a new generation of writers who, having experienced the collapse of the communist regime as adolescents, investigate the traumatic experience of change and adjustment to the social, economic and cultural realities of post-communist societies. While Hensel aims at recreating the lost Heimat (motherland) as an Erinnerungsraum (space of remembrance) and portraying the social tensions of the post-unification decade from an Eastern German perspective, Bradea focuses on depicting the desolate post-communist industrial landscape, as well as the everyday lives of anonymous Romanians caught in the vagaries of transition.
Transylvanian Saxons' migration from Romania to Germany: the formation of a 'return' diaspora?
(2013)
Processes and patterns of migration on a global scale have changed in profound ways during the last two decades (Smith and King, 2012). In the European context, this is exemplified by transformations to the traditional mobility patterns from East to West Europe (Koser and Lutz, 1998), with migrants more likely to be involved in temporary circular and transnational mobility (Favell, 2008). Since the end of the Second World War, historical and political events in Europe have facilitated the mobility of ethnic Germans from Eastern Europe to Germany. Subsequently, the fall of the Iron Curtain has permitted unrestrained East-West movements, which resulted in mass migrations towards the West and diaspora fragments in the East. However, after settlement in the West, ethnic Germans have also been absorbed within wider temporary and transnational movements (Koser, 2007). Within this context, this thesis examines the post-migratory lives of three generations of Transylvanian Saxons in Germany by exploring the cultural, social, economic and political dimensions of this community. This thesis aims to contribute to on-going academic debates about diasporas by explicitly responding to Hoerder s (2002) call for more studies on ethnic German diasporas. It shows that Transylvanian Saxons, who relocated to the ancestral homeland, do not disrupt identities and lives forged in diaspora, but rather, they negotiate complex identities and belongings in relation to both home and homeland . It reveals a double diaspora and the necessity to perceive identity and diaspora as dynamic processes and constantly evolving in relation to time, space and place. This double diasporic allegiance in the case of the Transylvanian Saxons suggests interrogating the formation of a return diaspora and its importance for processes of international migration.
This is the sixth article in our series Trouble on the Far-Right.
As everywhere else in Eastern Europe, ever since the fall of the communist regime, Romania’s political system has experienced dramatic changes from one electoral cycle to another, starting off with what was considered to be an inflation of political parties at the beginning of the 1990’s and arriving today at what seems to approximate a two-party system, with the Social-Democratic Party (PSD) on the left and the National Liberal Party (PNL) on the right side of the political spectrum. However, the fog surrounding the ideological identities of virtually all Romanian political parties has only intensified in time, leaving the party system in flux and creating the idea that there are no significant differences between the major political players. As was the case of many other countries, this situation has generated the (at least partial) success of a radical anti-establishment discourse. However, unlike other European countries, the far right in Romania did not benefit by the financial crisis...
After more than a decade of post-socialist transition, transition theories are increasingly criticised for their inability to grasp the new post-socialist reality. However, even in the light of political, economic, social and cultural restructuring processes taking place on a global scale, the structural legacies of socialist and pre-socialist development are not erased. On the contrary, they continue to play an important role by filtering the impact of global tendencies upon post-socialist societies. With reference to a case study from the Romanian city of Timisoara I will address in the following the ambivalencies connected to the efforts of local elites in the process of implementing global-level requirements in a post-socialist environment.
For the first time in post-Communist Romania, the national legislative elections organized in December 2016 allow the citizens living abroad to cast their vote by regular mail. To use postal voting the voters had to register between May and September 2016 and numbers reveal that very few voters registered. This article analyzes the sources of information used by those who registered and the causes of those who did not register. We use data from a survey conducted between 18 September (a few days after registration was closed) and 4 October 2016 with 403 respondents. The results are not generalizable to the entire diaspora (since the sampling is not representative probabilistic) but they are informative and relevant to the understanding of the process. They show that that main sources of information for those who registered were online (Facebook and the website of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs), newspapers, and friends and acquaintances. At the same time, the absence of information about registration and the difficulty of procedures were the main reasons against the registration.
Linyphia triumphalis Denis, 1952 was found to be a junior synonym of Centromerus pabulator (O.P.-Cambridge, 1875) (Araneae, Linyphiidae). New synonymy.
Trogulus banaticus Avram, 1971 is characterised and recorded as new for Slovenia. This species was previously mistaken for T. coriziformis C. L. Koch, 1839 and T. graecus Dahl, 1903 which were later rejected from the Slovenian fauna. T. banaticus is compared with the similar, and partly sympatric, T. tingiformis C. L. Koch, 1847 with which it has often been confused. A table of distinguishing characters for both species is provided, and the ecology of T. banaticus and its general distribution are discussed.
: German in East Central and South East Europe is deeply rooted in the area’s multilingualism. It shows specific developments in different countries, though. In this article the examples Slovenia, Czech Republic, and Romania represent German in very different situations, historically as well as contemporary.
In den Bergdörfern des Motzenlandes im Westgebirge Rumäniens haben sich bis heute traditionelle Landnutzungen, Landschaftsstrukturen und Biozönosen erhalten. Die Bevölkerung lebt von der Holzverarbeitung, der Viehzucht und Grünlandwirtschaft. Handwerk und (Tausch-)Handel mit Holzbottichen sowie neuerdings der Verkauf von Bauholz kommen hinzu. Gärten und kleine Äckerchen dienen der Eigenversorgung. Aufgrund des montanen Klimas spielen sie eine untergeordnete Rolle. Angebaut werden vor allem Hackfrüchte wie Kartoffeln und Weißkraut, selten auch Halmfrüchte wie Hafer (für die Pferde) und Roggen zur Gewinnung von Stroh als Zusatz für das Winterfutter. Bis heute wird Feldgraswirtschaft in Form der Egartenwirtschaft mit einem Wechsel von Ackerbau- und Grünlandphasen betrieben. Nach einigen Jahren des Ackerbaus findet auf einigen Äckern ein Nutzungswechsel hin zum Grünland statt. Im ersten Jahr nach der Ackernutzung herrschen einjährige Ackerunkrautarten noch vor. Sie werden abgelöst von mehrjährigen Rhizom-Unkräutern. Diese können sich jedoch nicht vollständig durchsetzen. Das Wechselgrünland wird bereits im ersten Jahr nach der Ackernutzung zur Heugewinnung gemäht. Dadurch werden die Unkrautarten zurückgedrängt; die Wiesenvegetation regeneriert sich bemerkenswert schnell. Schon nach etwa drei bis vier Jahren können auf den ehemaligen Ackerstandorten mesotraphente, relativ naturnahe Frischwiesen entstehen, deren Artenzusammensetzung dem langjährigen Dauergrünland floristisch ähnelt.
Der Westliche Maiswurzelbohrer (WCR) Diabrotica virgifera virgifera LeConte 1868 (Coleoptera, Chrysomelidae) ist einer der bedeutendsten Maisschädlinge weltweit. Alleine in den USA verursacht der Kosten (Schäden und Bekämpfungsmaßnahme von Larven und Adulten) von über 1 Mrd. US-Dollar Jahr. Der Hauptschaden wird durch die Larven verursacht, welche an den Wurzeln fressen und somit massive Ernteverluste herbeiführen können. Bei starkem Befall können auch die Adulten schädlich werden, sie durch Fraß an den Narbenfäden die Kornausbildung beeinträchtigen. Der Käfer stammt ursprünglich Mittelamerika und wurde Anfang der 90er Jahre in Europa (Balkangebiet) eingeschleppt. Es ist bekannt, dass sich die Larven des WCR auch an anderen monokotylen Pflanzen als Mais entwickeln können (Branson & Ortman 1967a & 1970, Moeser 2003, Oyediran & al 2004, Breitenbach & al 2005 / 2006). Dikotyle Pflanzen gehören nach heutigen Erkenntnissen nicht in das Wirtspflanzenspektrum Larven. Diese Untersuchungen fanden allerdings entweder in den USA oder im Labor statt und sind nur bedingt auf die europäische Feldsituation übertragbar. In 2004 wurden erstmals Freilandversuche Wirtspflanzenspektrum in Rumänien unter europäischen Freilandbedingungen durchgeführt (Breitenbach & al 2005). Diese Versuche wurden in 2005 und 2006 fortgeführt. Bis jetzt wurden 5 verschiedene Ungräser als mögliche Wirtspflanzen für die Larven des WCR unter Freilandbedingungen nachgewiesen.