Get 20M+ Full-Text Papers For Less Than $1.50/day. Start a 14-Day Trial for You or Your Team.

Learn More →

CZECH STUDIES: LITERATURE

CZECH STUDIES: LITERATURE SLAVONIC LANGUAGES* I. CZECH STUDIES LANGUAGE POSTPONED LITERATUREt By K. BRUSAK, Visiting Lecturer in Czech and Slovak at the University of Cambridge (This survey covers the years 1989, 1990 and 1991) I. GENERAL The works registered in the present survey belong, with a few exceptions, to a period of transition that began in the middle of the Ig8os and came into full swing after Ig8g. L. Dolezel, 'Str~ktura.lni tematologie a semantika moznych svetu. Pfipad Dvojnika', CL: I-I I' observing the situation from abroad, states: 'The liquidation of the totalitarian regime in Czechoslovakia created the conditions for a revival of theoretical thinking generally and consequently for the revival of Czech literary theory. [ ... ] The question is, which way should it go?'. After recommending giving attention to the results of the Prague School of the thirties and applying them to versology and thematology, D. distinguishes two methodologically different modes of thematics, the traditional selective Stoffengeschichte and the struc­ tural thematology, and tests the latter on the traditional theme of the double. He distinguishes three types: a character with a definite identity existing in two or several fictitious worlds, whom he calls Orlando; two different characters with identical physical features http://www.deepdyve.com/assets/images/DeepDyve-Logo-lg.png The Year’s Work in Modern Language Studies Brill

Loading next page...
 
/lp/brill/czech-studies-literature-GOdEVS0Y0i

References

References for this paper are not available at this time. We will be adding them shortly, thank you for your patience.

Publisher
Brill
Copyright
Copyright © Koninklijke Brill NV, Leiden, The Netherlands
ISSN
0084-4152
eISSN
2222-4297
DOI
10.1163/22224297-90003213
Publisher site
See Article on Publisher Site

Abstract

SLAVONIC LANGUAGES* I. CZECH STUDIES LANGUAGE POSTPONED LITERATUREt By K. BRUSAK, Visiting Lecturer in Czech and Slovak at the University of Cambridge (This survey covers the years 1989, 1990 and 1991) I. GENERAL The works registered in the present survey belong, with a few exceptions, to a period of transition that began in the middle of the Ig8os and came into full swing after Ig8g. L. Dolezel, 'Str~ktura.lni tematologie a semantika moznych svetu. Pfipad Dvojnika', CL: I-I I' observing the situation from abroad, states: 'The liquidation of the totalitarian regime in Czechoslovakia created the conditions for a revival of theoretical thinking generally and consequently for the revival of Czech literary theory. [ ... ] The question is, which way should it go?'. After recommending giving attention to the results of the Prague School of the thirties and applying them to versology and thematology, D. distinguishes two methodologically different modes of thematics, the traditional selective Stoffengeschichte and the struc­ tural thematology, and tests the latter on the traditional theme of the double. He distinguishes three types: a character with a definite identity existing in two or several fictitious worlds, whom he calls Orlando; two different characters with identical physical features

Journal

The Year’s Work in Modern Language StudiesBrill

Published: Mar 13, 1992

There are no references for this article.