r 2025

Ingo Schultz: Neklidný Středoevropan Viktor Ullmann. Příběh pražského německého skladatele

SPURNÝ, Lubomír

Základní údaje

Originální název

Ingo Schultz: Neklidný Středoevropan Viktor Ullmann. Příběh pražského německého skladatele

Název anglicky

Ingo Schultz: The Unsettled Central European Viktor Ullmann. The Story of a German Composer from Prague

Vydání

2025

Další údaje

Jazyk

čeština

Typ výsledku

Recenze

Obor

60403 Performing arts studies

Stát vydavatele

Česká republika

Utajení

není předmětem státního či obchodního tajemství

Odkazy

Impakt faktor

Impact factor: 0.200 v roce 2024

Označené pro přenos do RIV

Ne

Organizační jednotka

Filozofická fakulta

Klíčová slova česky

Viktor Ullmann; Ingo Schultz; Magdaléna Živná; překlad

Klíčová slova anglicky

Viktor Ullmann; Ingo Schultz; Magdalena Zivna; translation
Změněno: 21. 4. 2025 19:05, prof. PhDr. Lubomír Spurný, Ph.D.

Anotace

V originále

Review of the Czech Expanded Edition of the Book by German Author Ingo Schultz, Translated by Magdaléna Živná. The original German title of the book is Viktor Ullmann: Leben und Werk. Among other issues, the author critically addresses the expanded Czech edition and the transformation of the title into the misleading Viktor Ullmann: The Unsettled Central European. The Story of a German Composer from Prague. Given the numerous social and political upheavals of both the past and present, the concept of "national identity" remains fluid and subject to reinterpretation, making any definitive classification inherently problematic. This is especially true in the case of Viktor Ullmann. Born in Teschen and active for much of his life in Prague, Ullmann remained an Austrian citizen, never voluntarily renouncing his nationality, and lived in Czechoslovakia as a foreign national with permanent residency.

Anglicky

Review of the Czech Expanded Edition of the Book by German Author Ingo Schultz, Translated by Magdaléna Živná. The original German title of the book is Viktor Ullmann: Leben und Werk. Among other issues, the author critically addresses the expanded Czech edition and the transformation of the title into the misleading Viktor Ullmann: The Unsettled Central European. The Story of a German Composer from Prague. Given the numerous social and political upheavals of both the past and present, the concept of "national identity" remains fluid and subject to reinterpretation, making any definitive classification inherently problematic. This is especially true in the case of Viktor Ullmann. Born in Teschen and active for much of his life in Prague, Ullmann remained an Austrian citizen, never voluntarily renouncing his nationality, and lived in Czechoslovakia as a foreign national with permanent residency.