Turks and Tatars in Bulgaria and the Balkans |
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Authors: | Ali Eminov |
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Affiliation: | 1. Chair of Ukranian Studies , University of Toronto , Canada ukr.chair@utoronto.ca |
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Abstract: | Generosity is the thought that comes to mind after hearing and later reading the five studies first presented at a symposium in Toronto (2 October 2008) and published here in this issue of Nationalities Papers. My colleagues, who span the disciplines of history, literary criticism, and political science, have been generous with the time they spent in composing their essays and then traveling to Toronto to deliver them in person, and they have been particularly generous in conveying a spirit of constructive criticism and self-reflection that represent the best aspects of our common intellectual enterprise. To each of you – George G. Grabowicz, Taras Kuzio (who initiated this symposium), Serhii Plokhy, Alexender J. Motyl, and Dominique Arel – I express my deep appreciation for your generosity of mind and spirit. |
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Keywords: | nationalism Ukrainian history multiculturalism |
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