Previous Next
Jak se zrcadlí česká moderna v interakčních vztazích VÁCLAV MAIDL Po přečtení čtyři sta sedmdesáti devíti stránek knihy Lucie Merhautové je dobré vrátit se ještě jednou k...
Fenomén Zappa: badatelský oříšek, nebo kámen úrazu? STEFAN SEGI V září roku 2013, u příležitosti dvacátého výročí úmrtí kytaristy a skladatele Franka Zappy, uspořádal Ústav...
Evropská knižní kultura? Ne, kultury… JIŘÍ TRÁVNÍČEK Na poli knižní a čtenářské kultury jsme v poslední době svědky několika integračních snah: shromáždit data...

Events Calendar

Previous month Previous day Next day Next month
By Year By Month By Week Today Search Jump to month
Přednáška George G. Grabowicze  
Tuesday, 10. June 2014, 10:00
     

 

10. 6. od 10:00 hod. v přednáškovém sále ÚČL AV ČR proslovil prof. George G. Grabowicz (Harvard University) přednášku “The ‘Prague School’ of Interwar Ukrainian Literature: How (if at all) Does it Fit into the Canon?”.

Abstrakt:

That there was a “Prague School” of Ukrainian literature is presumably well known to Ukrainian students who have to answer exam questions on this topic (usually by providing a list of names), and the literary scholars who write on this—but it may well be news to Czech literary scholars, or Slavists in general, or, indeed, for Czech students in Prague who also have to answer questions on the interwar period. What is one to make of this dissonance—and why should one care? The issues to be touched upon here are in large measure theoretical or historiographic, of principles and mechanisms of canon formation and how change works in it (why, for example, it is now important for the Czech canon to deal with, i.e., in some fashion incorporate, Kafka). On the other hand, there is the question of still undiscovered connections and formal features (for example in the poetry of Oleh Olzhych, a prominent member of the “Prague School” of Ukrainian literature) that show him and his setting to be much more part of the Prague of the 1920s and 30s than the canon (both Ukrainian and Czech) may have suspected.

 

 

Foto Michael Wögerbauer.