The issue investigates the Central European variants of bohemianism, as seen in relation to Paris, but also to other centres, which adopted the French bohemian life styles, such as New York. What initially appeared to be a somewhat marginal issue, of interest mainly to the local researchers aiming to complete the archives of the transnational bohemianism, did, in fact, attract contributors from very diverse disciplines and from a plethora of academic centres worldwide, reaching from California and Colorado to New Zealand, not omitting the United Kingdom and France, as well as, of course, Hungary, Czech Republic and Poland.
JavaScript is turned off in your web browser. Turn it on to take full advantage of this site, then refresh the page.