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The Esperanto movement in the Dutch East Indies and Indonesia
Published 2015-07-01Subjects: Get full text
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2
Wüster’s View of Terminology
Published 2019-03-01“…Wüster as Esperantist knew that languages can be shaped and even invented. …”
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The science of symbiosis and linguistic democracy in early twentieth-century Japan
Published 2015“…Focusing on the early twentieth-century Japanese Esperantist and popular celebrity writer Miyazawa Kenji as an embodiment of a larger intellectual phenomenon of early twentieth century Japan, the essay delineates the scientific world view behind the Esperanto movement and corresponding internal logic that developed in the language movement@s foundational years. …”
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ON TANABE KUNIO`S ARTICLE “FAMILIARIZING WITH THE ACHIEVEMENTS, LEARNING FROM OUR PIONEERS. VASILIY YEROSHENKO: STAYING IN JAPAN AND HIS FRIENDS
Published 2019-06-01“…The article written by the blind Masseur and Esperantist Mr. Tanabe Kunio and is translated into Russian in the year of the author’s 75th anniversary with his permission. …”
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Under the Spell of Distant Landscapes: On the Lives and Work of a Few Famous Hungarian Travellers and Explorers after 1945 – an Introduction to the Topic for English-Speaking Reade...
Published 2023-10-01“…In this study, I introduce five such brave and determined Hungarian travellers: Dénes Balázs: geographer and karst researcher, János Balogh: biologist, ecologist and professor, Steve Bezuk: engineer and extreme sportsman, who lived in the United States, Ödön Jakabos: Transylvanian writer and “Székely pilgrim”, and finally, Tibor Székely: travel writer, museologist and Esperantist from Vojvodina. They all – through their individual scientific achievements, discoveries, perseverance and human attitude – have become worthy heirs of the outstanding Hungarian explorers and travellers of the past centuries. …”
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Green Star Japan: language and internationalism in the Japanese Esperanto movement, 1905-1944
Published 2013“…From radical socialists to conservative academics, and from Japanese diplomats at the League of Nations to members of rural communities in the deep north of Japan, although their politics often differed, Japanese Esperantists came together to participate in the re-imagining of the modern world; in doing so they became part of a transnational community, one which reveals insights into both modern Japanese history, and the nature of internationalism.…”
Thesis