Representing Crisis in Early Modern Literatures from Northern and Central Europe: An Introduction Lucie Storchová, Kristi Viiding 3–5 PDF
Fire, Wolves, and Antichristt: Representing Lutheranism in the Works of Johannes and Olaus Magnus Astrid Nilsson 6–28 PDF
Divine Punishment and Daniel’s Dream: Eschatology and Moralism in Central European History Writing in the Mid-Sixteenth Century Gábor Petneházi 29–49 PDF
Pulcherrimus ordo naturae in Crisis or How Bohemian Latin Poets Coped with Changes in Wittenberg Cosmology after 1574 Lucie Storchová 50–77 PDF
Denotat attoniti quid tremor iste soli? Earthquakes as Representations of Crisis in Bohemian Literary Texts before 1620 Marcela Slavíková 78–96 PDF
Sickness and Death of the Body Politic in Early Modern Poland: Republic’s Lamentation in Literature and Political Discourse Jakub Wolak 97–128 PDF
The Tablet of Cebes, the Pythagorean Y and Hercules at the Crossroads as Allegories of the Way of Human Life in the Early Modern Bohemian Lands Marta Vaculínová 129–158 PDF
Images of Crisis in the Lyric Poetry by Maciej Kazimierz Sarbiewski (1595–1640) Maria Łukaszewicz-Chantry 159–179 PDF
Travel Writing as a Reflection on Crisis: An Exiled Livonian Nobleman Visiting His Homeland Kristi Viiding 180–195 PDF
Proof of Nobility as a Personal and Generational Identity Crisis: An Apologia against Defamation by Professor Andreas Virginius of Academia Dorpatensis Aira Võsa 196–213 PDF
The Image of Crisis in the Danish Sovereignty Act (1661) and The Royal Law (1665) Rasmus Gottschalck 214–237 PDF
Co-Implicated Literatures in East-Central Europe: Joseph Roth’s The Radetzky March and Ivo Andrić’s The Bridge over the Drina Vladimir Biti 238–258 PDF
The Formula Collections of the Franciscan Observants in Hungary (ca. 1451–1554). By Antal Molnár: Rome: Quaracchi, 2022. 773. pp. Farkas Gábor Kiss 277–283 PDF
Péter Pázmány (1570–1637). Edited by Alinka Ajkay and Emil Hargittay: Budapest: Universitas Publishing House, 2024. 252 pp. Kristóf Sebestyén 284–290 PDF
Shared heritage – gemeinsames Erbe. Kulturelle Interferenzräume im östlichen Europa als Sujet der Gegenwartsliteratur. Edited by Silke Pasewalck: Berlin–Boston: De Gruyter/Oldenbourg, 2023. 312 pp. Morten Nissen 291–298 PDF