METYKOVÁ, Monika. Bridge Guard: Transnational Artists, National Populist Politics and Cross-Border Inter-Ethnic Relationships. East Central Europe. Brill, 2014, vol. 41, 2-3, p. 277-295. ISSN 0094-3037.
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Basic information
Original name Bridge Guard: Transnational Artists, National Populist Politics and Cross-Border Inter-Ethnic Relationships
Authors METYKOVÁ, Monika (703 Slovakia, guarantor, belonging to the institution).
Edition East Central Europe, Brill, 2014, 0094-3037.
Other information
Original language English
Type of outcome Article in a journal
Field of Study Literature, mass media, audio-visual activities
Country of publisher Netherlands
Confidentiality degree is not subject to a state or trade secret
WWW URL
RIV identification code RIV/00216224:14230/14:00078178
Organization unit Faculty of Social Studies
Keywords in English Bridge Guard – contemporary art projects – Hungary – Slovakia – national populist politics
Tags topvydavatel
Tags International impact, Reviewed
Changed by Changed by: PhDr. Monika Metyková, Ph.D., učo 32153. Changed: 12/1/2015 15:06.
Abstract
This article concentrates on an artist-in-residence project that is linked to the Mária Valéria Bridge on the border between Slovakia and Hungary. The article traces the history of the bridge and of the ethnically mixed populations living on the opposite sides of the Danube River that the bridge connects in order to suggest the complexity of the cross-border relationships in this particular corner of Europe. In more recent decades relationships between Hungarians and Slovaks have been influenced by national populist politics exercised on both sides of the Danube after the fall of communism in the late 1980s. The consequence of such politics is a narrow understanding of “national” interests and “national” culture that prevents a more open, more cosmopolitan approach to the relationship among the ethnic groups living in the area. The long awaited and often delayed rebuilding of the Mária Valéria Bridge is symbolic of the shortcomings of the “national container” approach. A more cosmopolitan outlook is opened up by a transnational artistic project that is—perhaps not surprisingly— largely ignored by cultural and political elites in Slovakia and in Hungary. Bridge Guard was launched in 2004 and continues to attract artists from around the world whose art works are intended to “build virtual bridges to protect the real bridge.”
Links
EE2.3.20.0184, research and development projectName: Vytvoření interdisciplinárního týmu v oblasti výzkumu internetu a nových médií
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