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and others. However, the circle disbanded itself as useless in the spring of 1941, when most of
Macedonia came under Bulgarian administration, and a euphoria overwhelmed its participants, seeing in it a form of national unification.
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The
Macedonian literary circle in Sofia (1938 – 1941), Ph. D. Peter Galchin, Summary in English, сп. Македонски Преглед, София, бр. 1 & 2, 2002.
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Entangled
Histories of the Balkans: Volume One: National Ideologies and Language Policies, Roumen Dontchev Daskalov, Tchavdar Marinov, 2013,
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44:. With the foundation of this society, an attempt was made, to use it in order to do both. Though, its by-laws and statutes were in
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Contested Ethnic
Identity: The Case of Macedonian Immigrants in Toronto, 1900-1996, Chris Kostov, Peter Lang, 2010,
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adopted its thesis and tried to urge some intellectuals to work out a plan for the creation of a distinct
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immigrant community, who were
Bulgarian communists. After the
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24:, Bulgaria in 1938 by young and educated members of the
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resolution of the
Comintern on the Macedonian Question
110:Historical dictionary of the Republic of Macedonia
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20:(1938–1941) was a literary society created in
87:Macedonian Scientific and Literary Society
112:, Dimitar Bechev, Scarecrow Press, 2009,
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48:. Most active from its members were:
181:Cultural history of North Macedonia
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201:Macedonian writers' organizations
92:Young Macedonian Literary Society
191:1938 establishments in Bulgaria
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40:and for development of new
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18:Macedonian literary circle
34:Bulgarian Communist Party
32:published in 1934, the
196:Communism in Bulgaria
42:Macedonian literature
186:History of Bulgaria
38:Macedonian language
70:Mihail Smatrakalev
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66:Gjorgji Abadžiev
58:Kole Nedelkovski
50:Nikola Vaptsarov
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74:Dimitar Mitrev
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175:Categories
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98:References
26:Macedonian
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46:Bulgarian
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81:See also
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22:Sofia
148:ISBN
131:ISBN
114:ISBN
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