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@article{ Turşie2015,
 title = {Re-inventing the centre-periphery relation by the European capitals of culture: case-studies; Marseille-Provence 2013 and Pecs 2010},
 author = {Turşie, Corina},
 journal = {Eurolimes},
 number = {19},
 pages = {71-84},
 year = {2015},
 issn = {1841-9259},
 urn = {https://nbn-resolving.org/urn:nbn:de:0168-ssoar-46524-8},
 abstract = {The European Capital of Culture (ECoC) Program was initiated in mid 80's, as a modality to promote the richness and diversity of European cultures. It soon became evident that the Program's impact went beyond the cultural and political aspects and that the designation was a marketing opportunity for cities to improve image on a national and European scale, a regeneration tool in itself. ECoC is today about cities re-inventing their identities, re-narrating their history in a European context. The peripheral position, the unwanted heritage of the cities’ past, soon became elements to be exploited and re-invented. The study is focused on two border cities that won the ECoC title and their ability to use the title as a regenerative tool, in order to foster their European identity, to favourably reorient their geography and to reposition themselves on Europe's map: Marseille-Provence 2013 (a Western Europe big city/region with an ex-colonial past and a peripheral position complex) and Pecs 2010 (a small Eastern peripheral city with a communist past). Applying qualitative content analysis on three types of documents: Application (Bid) books, official web pages and ex-post European Commission's evaluations, the article intends to identify the narratives used by these border cities to comply with the European dimension of the ECoC project. (author's abstract)},
 keywords = {Ungarn; Hungary; Frankreich; France; Stadt; town; Kultur; culture; kulturelle Identität; cultural identity; Europa; Europe; Stadterneuerung; urban renewal; historische Entwicklung; historical development; Grenzgebiet; border region}}