t 2015

The Czech Avant-Garde Literary Movement Bettwen the World Wars

WINNER, Thomas G.; Michael HEIM a Ondřej SLÁDEK

Základní údaje

Originální název

The Czech Avant-Garde Literary Movement Bettwen the World Wars

Název anglicky

The Czech Avant-Garde Literary Movement Bettwen the World Wars

Autoři

WINNER, Thomas G.; Michael HEIM a Ondřej SLÁDEK

Vydání

New York, 200 s. 2015

Nakladatel

Peter Lang

Další údaje

Typ výsledku

Editorství odborné knihy

Utajení

není předmětem státního či obchodního tajemství

Forma vydání

tištěná verze "print"

Organizační jednotka

Pedagogická fakulta

ISBN

978-1-4331-2627-7

Klíčová slova česky

česká avantgarda ; česká literatura ; surrealismus ; poetismus

Klíčová slova anglicky

The Czech-Avantgarde ; the Czech literature ; surrealism ; poetism
Změněno: 22. 2. 2016 10:55, doc. PhDr. Ondřej Sládek, Ph.D.

Anotace

V originále

The Czech Avant-Garde Literary Movement Between the Two World Wars tells the little-known story of the renaissance of Czech literary arts in the period between the two world wars. The avant-garde writers during this period broke down the barrier between the elite literary language and the vernacular and turned to spoken language, substandard forms, everyday sources such as newspapers and detective stories, and forms of popular entertainment such as the circus and the cabaret. In his analyses of the writings of this period, Thomas G. Winner illuminates the aesthetic and linguistic characteristics of these works and shows how poetry and linguistics can be combined. The Czech Avant-Garde Literary Movement Between the Two World Wars is essential reading for courses on modern Czech literature, comparative literature, and Slavic literature.

Anglicky

The Czech Avant-Garde Literary Movement Between the Two World Wars tells the little-known story of the renaissance of Czech literary arts in the period between the two world wars. The avant-garde writers during this period broke down the barrier between the elite literary language and the vernacular and turned to spoken language, substandard forms, everyday sources such as newspapers and detective stories, and forms of popular entertainment such as the circus and the cabaret. In his analyses of the writings of this period, Thomas G. Winner illuminates the aesthetic and linguistic characteristics of these works and shows how poetry and linguistics can be combined. The Czech Avant-Garde Literary Movement Between the Two World Wars is essential reading for courses on modern Czech literature, comparative literature, and Slavic literature.