Academic literature on the topic 'Czech poet'

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Journal articles on the topic "Czech poet"

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Paces, Cynthia J. "“The Czech Nation must be Catholic!” An Alternative version of Czech Nationalism during the First Republic." Nationalities Papers 27, no. 3 (1999): 407–28. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/009059999108948.

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Jaroslav Durych, a popular Czech Catholic poet and essayist, began his weekly column in Lidové listy's (People's News) 10 May 1923 issue with the following proclamation: “The Czech Nation must be Catholic!” What did Durych mean by this puzzling statement? The majority of Czechs in the new Czechoslovak state considered themselves at least nominally Catholic. Yet Durych's article did not address the confessional status of Czechoslovakia's population, nor did it address religious differences between Czechs and Slovaks. Instead, Durych concerned himself with the representation of the Czech nation in popular mythology and official symbolism. He demanded that the Czech national symbols reflect the country's majority religion and not the Protestant experiment of the late Middle Ages.
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Martinek, Libor. "Poezie Wilhelma Przeczka v českých a německých překladech." Slavia Occidentalis, no. 74/2 (December 10, 2018): 135–59. http://dx.doi.org/10.14746/so.2017.74.29.

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In this article, we are presenting the work of a Polish poet from a Polish minority the Czech Cieszyn Silesia Wilhelm Przeczek (7. 4. 1936 v Karviná, Czechoslovakia - 10. 7. 2006 Třinec, Czech Republic) into the Czech and German language, as the author’s poetry was published not only in journals but also in books. We understand translation as an expression of intercultural communication, and especially in the area of the literature of a national minority, which is undoubtedly a Polish ethnic group in the Czech Cieszyn Silesia, it is a paramount phenomenon comparing the quality of literary life in the area with majority culture (Czech); as far as translations into German are concerned, it shows the interest of translators in the work of a poet from the Polish national minority, without this witnessing the emanation of a typical Polish soul in Polish literature in the Czech Republic and former Czechoslovakia, but it is evidence that it is fully competitive in total Polish national culture.
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David-Fox, Katherine. "Prague-Vienna, Prague-Berlin: The Hidden Geography of Czech Modernism." Slavic Review 59, no. 4 (2000): 735–60. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/2697417.

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In response to his banishment to barbaric Tomis, on the Black Sea, in 8 C.E., Ovid composed the Tristia, entreaties to Emperor Augustus to permit his return to civilized Rome. Feeling equally alienated from fin-de-siècle Vienna, the Czech expatriate poet, Josef Svatopluk Machar, produced the slim collection Tristium Vindobona. One poem, “První dojmy” (First impressions), finds Machar's narrator and alter ego tormented by visions of an otherworldly and unattainable Prague. “Na Kahlenbergu” (On Kahlenberg) takes the narrator to the eponymous hill outside Vienna, where he invokes his distressed land to the north. The legacy of Habsburg dominion over the Czechs appears to him as a “wide and bloody path“ spanning historical battlegrounds from Diirnkrut, near Vienna, to the White Mountain, west of Prague. Czech critics in 1893 hailed Tristium as both a literary and a political event, its stature enhanced by its publication under the “shadow of bayonets,” that is, during an official state of emergency in Prague. The young critic Emanuel z Čenkova raised only an amicable objection in his review in Literární listy: Machar's narrator could easily come home—eluding reverie and history—since “express trains cross like lightning” between Vienna and Prague.
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Kolbuszewski, Jacek. "Karola Hawliczka Borovskiego wyprawa do Tatr." Góry, Literatura, Kultura 14 (August 18, 2021): 375–83. http://dx.doi.org/10.19195/2084-4107.14.23.

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In the summer of 1842, Karel Havlíček Borovský (1821–1856) traveled from Prague (Czech) to Galicia. He was a good walker, and walked most of the way (over 1000 km). The last stage of his journey was a few days’ stay in the Tatra Mountains. He was then in the Kościeliska Valley, where he inscribed his name on the Pisana rock. After spending the night in Kościelisko, he visited the iron-works in Kuźnice, and moved to Bukowina Tatrzańska. There he wrote a poem in the memorial book. The article discusses this work as one of the most important Czech poems about the Tatras. The main highlight of the journey was a trip to Morskie Oko, after which the poet crossed the moun-tains to Kieżmark.
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Procházka, Martin. "Shakespeare and National Mythologizing in Czech Nineteenth Century Drama." Multicultural Shakespeare: Translation, Appropriation and Performance 13, no. 28 (2016): 25–33. http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/mstap-2016-0003.

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The paper will discuss the ways in which Shakespeare’s tragedies (King Lear) and histories (1 and 2 Henry IV), translated in the period of the Czech cultural renaissance (known also as the Czech National Revival) at the end of the 18th and in the first half of the 19th century, challenge and transform the nationalist concept of history based on “primordialism” (Anthony Smith), deriving from an invented account of remote past (the forged Manuscripts of Dvur Kralove and Zelena Hora) and emphasizing its absolute value for the present and future of the Czech nation. While for nationalist leaders Shakespeare’s dramas served as models for “boldly painted heroic characters” of the Czech past, translators, dramatists and poets had to deal with the aspects of Shakespeare’s tragedies and histories which were disrupting the nationalist visions of the past and future. Contrasting the appropriations of King Lear and both parts of Henry IV in the translations and historical plays by the leading Czech dramatist Josef Kajetán Tyl (1808-1852) and the notebooks and dramatic fragments of the major romantic poet Karel Hynek Mácha (1810-1836), the paper will attempt to specify the role of Shakespeare in shaping the historical consciousness of emerging modern Czech culture.
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Weil, Abigail. "To Revive Delight: A Poet's Restaurant Reviews in Early 1990s Prague." Gastronomica 17, no. 4 (2017): 75–87. http://dx.doi.org/10.1525/gfc.2017.17.4.75.

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In 1993, the Prague-based newspaper Lidové noviny (The People's News) ran a short-lived restaurant review column, Básník má hlad (The Poet Is Hungry). The author was Petr Král, a poet and essayist who had recently returned to Prague after two decades of exile in Paris. In this article, I contextualize Král's restaurant reviews within his oeuvre and in the history of Czech restaurant culture. The first half describes the evolution of restaurants in Czech culture and literature from the First Czechoslovak Republic through the communist period. The second half is devoted to close readings of Král's restaurant reviews. I find that they are consistent with the restorative nature of the Czech political and economic transition after communism. To Král, the restaurant represents a microcosm of society. Thus, in the spirit of restoration and revitalization, he elevates the genre of restaurant reviews, infusing them with political urgency and a sense of poetry.
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Verina, Ulyana, and Andrea Grominová. "M. Valek, G. Aygi and “Woman on the Right”, or The first Slovak translation of G. Aygi’s poetry in the context of the 1960s and modern reception." Philological Sciences. Scientific Essays of Higher Education, no. 4 (July 2021): 80–87. http://dx.doi.org/10.20339/phs.4-21.080.

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The book of poetry by G. Aygi was translated and published into Slovak language as “Žena sprava” (“The Woman on the Right”) in 1967. The same year the book was translated into Czech language. It is the Czech translation that occupies the first place in the research and bibliography of G. Aygi’s publications. The paper examines the features of the Slovak translation through the views of the translator and poet M. Valek. The translations appeared when Slovak poets were in search of finding a modern artistic language and modifying the original in accordance with the artistic concept of the poet-translator. M. Valek’s interest in the poetry of G. Aygi was associated with the same range of problems. The translations have an imprint of M. Valek’s own stylistics and demonstrate his priority for existentiality and metaphor, which he emphasizes, leading to neglecting the peculiarities of the original form. The contemporary Slovak translations of G. Aygi’s poetry are more focused on the transfer of formal innovation, the preservation of the author’s punctuation and graphics. However, the novelty of G. Aygi’s verses, which is still far from being fully explored, was comprehensively analyzed only in the 2000s and contemporary translators rely on new theory as well as a rich history of translations.The novelty of the paper is that it compares the translations of different years, the views of G. Aygi and M. Valek on free verse, and also provides an assessment of the translations by G. Aygi himself.
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Motornyy, О. "TIME AND SPACE IN IVAN WERNISCH’S POETRY." Comparative studies of Slavic languages and literatures. In memory of Academician Leonid Bulakhovsky, no. 36 (2020): 198–209. http://dx.doi.org/10.17721/2075-437x.2020.36.16.

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The article examines the poetic world of the modern Czech prose writer, poet, translator from several European languages, a participant in the Prague Spring, whose works have not been printed for a long time and were banned, author of poetry collections “Kam letí nebe” (1961), “Zimohrádek” (1965), “Loutky” (1970), “Doupě latinářů” (1992), “Blbecká poezie” (2002), “Penthesilea” (2019), Ivan Wernisch. The writer has a great creative legacy that dates back to the sixties of the last century. During this long time, he managed to publish about thirty poetry books. Surrealism, interweaving of temporal and spatial indicators, interweaving of poetic and prosaic forms, rich poetic world are typical features of I. Wernisch’s poetry. The article explores the spatio-temporal relations of the Ivan Wernisch’s poetic world, the features of the image of the lyrical hero. Some poetry by Ivan Wernisch was used over time as lyrics of songs by Czech rock bands. The Ivan Wernisch’s son Michal Wernisch (also known as Ewald Murrer) followed his father’s footsteps and today is also known as a poet.
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Fedorovič, Irena. "“Your Head so Dear to my Heart, I Would Hug Tight to My Chest and I would Tell How Much I Love You”. Letters of Jozefina Hálkova to Czesław Jankowski from 1884." Slavistica Vilnensis 64 (November 19, 2019): 133–43. http://dx.doi.org/10.15388/slavviln.2019.64(1).10.

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The aim of the article is to analyze the three letters written in Czech in 1884 and addressed to Polish poet, writer, literature critic, and translator Czesław Jankowski (1857–1929). The author of the letters is a previously unknown Czech woman, the daughter of a schoolteacher in the city of Kladno. She got acquainted with Cz. Jankowski in Krakow and became the object of his passion. The letters are stored in the Wroblewski Library of the Lithuanian Academy of Sciences in Vilnius. Although the author of this article has already mentioned the existence of these love letters in 2000, J. Hálkova’s letters to Cz. Jankowski have not yet been analyzed.
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Kittlová, Markéta. "Changing the World Through Poetry: Confessions, Poems and Banners of Adam Borzič." Porównania 27, no. 2 (2020): 325–39. http://dx.doi.org/10.14746/por.2020.2.17.

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This study focuses on Adam Borzič, one of the most distinctive contemporary Czech poets. The study contextualises his work within current Czech poetry but also examines his other work that is not strictly classified as art as though it were cultural work with avant-garde features. It investigates four volumes of Borzič’s work in terms of the changes in the author’s creative gesture, which expands from his conviction that the world is at a turning point and the avant-garde longing to change the world by poetry. In the four volumes of Borzič’s poetry (written so far), this gesture is embodied through delicately intimate, acutely physical, or even gigantically all-embracing positions, where he employs motives of the heart, head, hand and mouth. The study attempts to evaluate the change in Borzič’s work in the lightof T. S. Eliot’s understanding of the social role of poetry and avant-garde longing to change reality through art. The Czech poet, Adam Borzič, is one of the most distinctive figures of the current Czech literary scene. His poetry is distinct because of its unique gesture andalso represents a strong current in the poetry production of the past decade with its emphasis on the social function of poetry7 and the poet’s role as somebody who should nurture the world through his/her work or even change it. This study attempts to portray Borzič’s work as focused on the mentioned topics and related issues of the end of the first decade of the twenty-first century and renew interest in them, contextualise his work within current Czech poetry but also investigate his other work, which is not strictly artistic but which possesses some avant-garde features.
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Czech poet"

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McMaster, Irene Anne. "Privatisation and transformation in the Czech Republic 1989-1997." Thesis, University of Strathclyde, 2000. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.248525.

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Uhlir, David. "Regional transformation in the Czech Republic : internationalization, embeddedness and adaptability." Thesis, Open University, 1999. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.300240.

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Oates-Indruchová, Libora. "Discourses of gender in pre- and post-1989 Czech culture." Thesis, Lancaster University, 2001. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.274281.

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Banovcova, Lenka. "Attitudes to work in the Czech Republic in post-socialist transition." Thesis, University of Bath, 2015. https://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.659201.

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In 1989, the Czech Republic rejected the totalitarian system and embarked on a long journey of rebuilding society. This complex process of transition is mainly marked with profound reshaping of the political and economic system. The main aim of this thesis is to explore the attitudes to work in the Czech Republic during the post-socialist transition, and to establish the main determinants of these attitudes. Moreover, it is the purpose of this study to assess the possible legacy of the socialist system in the area of work and employment. This research employs a mixed method approach which is a combination of broader quantitative analysis, setting out the patterns of the change, followed by an in-depth qualitative investigation into how people understand and perceive the change in their everyday lives. By means of combining these different methods, this research is set to reflect on the levels of complexity of the transition process. The most significant finding to emerge from the study, is the central role of the market and its forces as the main driving force of the transition, both in the area of work and in other spheres of life. While the effects of marketization in the Czech society are profound, my investigation shows that the consequences of market forces, including work and life insecurities, are not equally distributed across the population, but vary along the dimensions of age, gender, geographical location and the level of education and qualification. This reinstates social inequality and stratification in the society. The legacies of socialism were found to have an attenuating effect in the transition defined primarily in terms of social and cultural forces. Broader implications arising from these results are in the area of social solidarity in respect to the functioning of the capitalist organizations, as well as in the sphere of people’s relationships in general.
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Carter, Helen. "Post-Communist enterprise restructuring in the Czech Republic : seven case studies." Thesis, University of St Andrews, 2003. http://hdl.handle.net/10023/14066.

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Voucher privatisation was designed to effect a rapid transformation of state-owned enterprises into private ownership with as limited state intervention as possible. Premised on neo-classical economic theory, the Czech government anticipated new private owners would emerge with greater incentives than the state to undertake restructuring and ensure the efficient operation of these firms. However, this thesis argues that for restructuring to occur, formal ownership patterns are less important than an ability to exercise control because of institutional influences. The de jure and de facto roles of owners, managers, and labour are discussed, showing how endogenous and exogenous factors affect their ability to dictate and control restructuring outcomes in voucher privatised firms. The thesis argues that observed post-privatisation restructuring outcomes cannot be understood without considering the institutional environment within which firms are situated. Institutions are conceived to comprise formal, informal and enforcement aspects, but also with a temporal dimension encapsulated by the use of path- dependency and embeddedness. The explanatory framework offered here is a modified version of new institutionalism perspectives, termed "embedded institutionalism". Case studies of seven firms privatised by voucher are presented in this study to demonstrate how the interaction of institutional influences, understood through embedded institutionalism, is the most appropriate framework for understanding postprivatisation restructuring processes in post-communist countries. This approach provides a synthesis between the theoretical expectations of neo-classical economic theory and the practical outworking of post-privatisation restructuring in Czech firms. Voucher privatisation was a novel scheme, and became the central aspect of the Klaus government's economic transformation. Important historical and contemporary institutional influences impacted on its design and implementation. However, it is argued that understanding privatisation and its effects on restructuring through embedded institutionalism negates the view that a unique Czech way of privatisation exists, and that observed outcomes are simply responses to the surrounding institutional environment.
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Mott, Stephanie A. "After the revolution: political legitimacy in the post-Communist Czech Republic." Thesis, Boston University, 2003. https://hdl.handle.net/2144/27728.

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Boston University. University Professors Program Senior theses.<br>PLEASE NOTE: Boston University Libraries did not receive an Authorization To Manage form for this thesis. It is therefore not openly accessible, though it may be available by request. If you are the author or principal advisor of this work and would like to request open access for it, please contact us at open-help@bu.edu. Thank you.<br>2031-01-02
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Hedin, Tora. "Changing Identities : Language Variation on Czech Television." Doctoral thesis, Stockholm : Acta Universitatis Stockholmiensis : Almqvist & Wiksell [distributör], 2005. http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:su:diva-723.

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Fialová, Lydie. "Remnants of humanity : psychiatry and post-socialism in the Czech Republic, 1989-2010." Thesis, University of Edinburgh, 2016. http://hdl.handle.net/1842/28684.

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This thesis explores the roles that medicine, human rights discourse, and the arts play in the project to improve the lives of patients suffering from severe forms of mental illness in the context of the post-socialist transformation of the Czech Republic. It is a study of the ways in which social solidarity and social exclusion intersect in the spaces of mental illness in a particular historical setting, and how the responsibility for care is negotiated between families, communities, the medical profession, and the state. The first part of the thesis focuses on the proposed reform of care for patients with severe mental illness that was put forward in the two decades after 1989. I examine the origins and aims of the attempted institutional change – the ‘humanization of psychiatry’ – in the context of the influential Charter 77 movement which demanded respect for the rights of those who are unable to claim them for themselves. I also trace how the re-establishment of a civil society that owed much to the concept of ‘apolitical politics’ and the process of the reintegration of Czech Republic into the European community impacted the attempted reforms. More than twenty years after the revolution, Czech Psychiatry still does not comply with international standards of care and, as I show, despite the explicit disclaimer with the totalitarian past and great hopes for change, there is in fact a clear continuation of many of the practices, ideas, interactions, as well as forms of governance of the preceding decades. These historical legacies, in combination with other factors, such as ideological disagreements within the psychiatric profession, a lack of political interest in this area, and a strong focus on other economic priorities have all contributed to the failure to improve mental health care. The second part of the thesis offers a complementary perspective on these processes – a view from ‘inside’ of the institutions that provide psychiatric care. The origins of institutional care in Central Europe date back to late nineteenth century, when large hospitals were built within parks as self-sufficient complexes surrounded by walls, outside of large cities. My research took place in two contrasting institutions: one a highly specialised clinical and research center for treatment of acute conditions, and the other a hospital for treatment of chronic conditions originally devoted to those with ‘incurable’ conditions. I show how the notion of ‘curability’ is a crucial factor in both the experience of the patients and the social responses to their conditions. In this part I also explore some epistemological issues in psychiatry, including knowledge, practices, and ideology, in the context of a strong scientific materialism where – unlike in many parts of the world – the tradition of psychoanalysis has been absent. Specifically, I examine the role of neurobiological paradigm in various interpretations of psychotic experience, its affect on patient’s self-understanding, and its role in the externalization of agency and responsibility. Finally I address the phenomenon of using ‘unclaimed bodies’ of psychiatric patients for anatomical teaching and research, and interpret this practice through notions of liminality, impurity, and sacrifice. I conclude the thesis by examining the ethical dimension of psychiatric care in the light of the writings by Emmanuel Lévinas.
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Reed, Quentin. "Political corruption, privatisation and control in the Czech Republic : a case study of problems in multiple transition." Thesis, University of Oxford, 1996. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.326873.

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Vogt, Henri Hans Mikael. "The utopia of post-communism : the Czech Republic, Eastern Germany and Estonia after 1989." Thesis, University of Oxford, 2000. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.365555.

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Books on the topic "Czech poet"

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Kriseová, Eda. Vat͡s︡lav Khavel: Poet i prezident. Izd-vo na Bŭlgarskata akademii͡a︡ na naukite, 1992.

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(Organization), People in Need. Transformation: The Czech experience. People in Need, 2006.

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1930-, Bondy Egon, ed. Kádrový dotazník. Babylon, 2001.

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Březina, Otokar. Úlomky hovorů Otokara Březiny. Jota & Arca Jimfa, 1992.

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Hlinka, Bohuslav. Den se mi v rukou přelomil: Jiří Wolker neznámý. Práce, 1990.

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Šajtar, Drahomír. Básnířka Tereza Dubrovská: Letopis. Tilia, 2001.

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Bor, D. Ž. Dítě andělů: Otokar Březina, život jako dílo. Trigon, 2000.

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Hiršal, Josef. Vínek vzpomínek. Rozmluvy, 1989.

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Orten, Jiří. Hořký kruh: Korespondence s Věrou Fingerovou. Torst, 1996.

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Reynek, Bohuslav. Dnes jen o té prašivině: Dopisy Bohuslava Reynka Tereze Sumové z let 1951-1970. Paseka, 2005.

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Book chapters on the topic "Czech poet"

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Pynsent, Robert B. "Mácha, the Czech National Poet." In Comparative History of Literatures in European Languages. John Benjamins Publishing Company, 2010. http://dx.doi.org/10.1075/chlel.xxv.06pyn.

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Pavlincová, Helena. "Dopisy Jana Patočky Robertu Konečnému." In Filosofie jako životní cesta. Masaryk University Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.5817/cz.muni.p210-9458-2019-5.

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The contribution contains 11 unpublished letters of Jan Patočka from 1935–1967 supplemented with the author’s comments and explanations. The addressee of the letters, the nature of which is friendly and rather private, was the Brno philosopher, poet and psychologist Robert Konečný. The author devotes the introduction to the illumination of the origins of the letters and the description of the lives of both friends, whose actions, thought and unquestionable moral authority make them integral figures of the humanist tradition of Czech philosophy.
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Pulec, Jiří. "Robert Konečný a jeho písemná pozůstalost v univerzitním archivu." In Filosofie jako životní cesta. Masaryk University Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.5817/cz.muni.p210-9458-2019-4.

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In January 2018, Masaryk University archives obtained an extensive written estate of Robert Konečný (1906–1981), an associate professor of philosophy and professor of psychology at Masaryk University, the pioneer of health-care psychology in Czechoslovakia, a poet and author, and a major figure of resistance to Nazism. Robert Konečný’s personal files, which belong among the best preserved items in the university archives, were organized and made accessible during 2018. Extensive correspondence mainly includes collections of letters from key figures of Czech literature, philosophy and psychology. A remarkable part of the estate consists of texts of Konečný’s lectures and speeches as well as documents on his educational activity in radio and television broadcasting. The files also represent a valuable source for the study of resistance to Nazism in Moravia. An extensive set of manuscripts, typescripts and prints from the fields of psychology, philosophy and literature can serve as a basis for the preparation of Konečný’s bibliography.
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De Boer-Ashworth, Elizabeth. "Czech Republic." In The Global Political Economy and Post-1989 Change. Palgrave Macmillan UK, 2000. http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/9780333985038_5.

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Pixová, Michaela. "Urban Grassroots Movements in Post-socialist Czechia: Spatial, Social, Cultural, and Political Context." In Contested Czech Cities. Springer Singapore, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-981-32-9709-8_1.

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Doležalová, Antonie. "Czech Republic." In The Palgrave Handbook of Conflict and History Education in the Post-Cold War Era. Springer International Publishing, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-05722-0_16.

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Myant, Martin. "The Czech Republic: From ‘Czech’ Capitalism to ‘European’ Capitalism." In Varieties of Capitalism in Post-Communist Countries. Palgrave Macmillan UK, 2007. http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/9780230627574_6.

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Asatryan, Hakob. "The Armenians in the Czech Republic." In Armenians in Post-Socialist Europe. Böhlau Verlag, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.7788/9783412502263-015.

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Souralová, Adéla, and Eva Šlesingerová. "Post-socialist eldercare in the Czech Republic." In The Routledge Handbook of Social Care Work Around the World. Routledge, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781315612805-12.

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Cibulka, Frank. "Religion and Transitional Justice in the Czech Republic." In Churches, Memory and Justice in Post-Communism. Springer International Publishing, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-56063-8_3.

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Conference papers on the topic "Czech poet"

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Ouředníček, M., A. Klsák, and J. Nemeškal. "CZECH SUBURBANIZATION IN POST-TRANSFORMATION ERA – THE DEVELOPMENT, EVALUATION AND CHALLENGES." In “SUBURBAN REVOLUTION” AND PERIPHERAL URBAN TERRITORIES IN THE POST-SOVIET SPACE. Buryat Scientific Center of SB RAS Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.31554/978-5-7925-0571-1-2019-1-57-62.

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Ouředníček, M., A. Klsák, and J. Nemeškal. "CZECH SUBURBANIZATION IN POST-TRANSFORMATION ERA – THE DEVELOPMENT, EVALUATION AND CHALLENGES." In “SUBURBAN REVOLUTION” AND PERIPHERAL URBAN TERRITORIES IN THE POST-SOVIET SPACE. Buryat Scientific Center of SB RAS Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.31554/978-5-7925-0571-1-2019-2-157-161.

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Hladký, Ladislav. "Czech Historiography on Bosnia and Herzegovina (2000–2018)." In Međunaordna naučno-kulturološka konferencija “Istoriografija o BiH (2001–2017 )”. Academy of Sciences and Arts of Bosnia and Herzegovina, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.5644/pi2020.186.08.

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This paper provides a synopsis and characterization of the most important historiographically, politologically, and ethnologically oriented works published in the Czech Republic between 2000 and 2018 on the history and current evolution of Bosnia and Herzegovina. Czech works on the history of Bosnia and Herzegovina can be divided into two main groups. The first group includes monographs by historians who were familiar with the reality of Bosnian multiethnicity in the period before the breakup of Yugoslavia and in that context, therefore, continue in their books to support the idea of preserving Bosnia within its existing borders and in the form of a multinational state. The second group comprises books by Czech authors who primarily focus on analysing political events in the contemporary, socalled post-Dayton Bosnia, of which they are highly critical and as a result also highly skeptical when it comes to the prospect of continued coexistence between the nations of Bosnia. During the period in question, several works were published in the Czech Republic dedicated to the history of Czech-Bosnian relations and the synthetical treatment of the history of the Czech national minority living in Bosnia and Herzegovina.
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Koryčánková, Simona. "POETIC TEXTS IN TEACHING OF RUSSIAN ON B1 LEVEL (ON THE EXAMPLE OF WORKING WITH VOCABULARY DENOTING PERCEPTION IN THE POEMS OF O. BŘEZINA AND V. S. SOLOVYOV)." In Aktuální problémy výuky ruského jazyka XIV. Masaryk University Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.5817/cz.muni.p210-9781-2020-5.

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The author of the article aims to introduce Russian poetic texts into the teaching of Czech students on B1 level. The chosen teaching methodology is based on motivating the students with the use of Czech symbolist poetry by O. Březina and a subsequent analysis of a poem by V. S. Solovyov. Work with the poetry of both authors focuses on perceptual lexicon, which plays key role in uncovering the meaning of a symbolist text. Students can thus gain knowledge of polysemous words and their different author’s connotations in an enticing and creative way. This enhances not only their knowledge of the content and language, but also of the aesthetic component related to the main function of an artistic text
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Montañé, Rubén, and Lars Olof Nord. "Dynamic Simulations of the Post-combustion CO2 Capture System of a Combined Cycle Power Plant." In The 12th International Modelica Conference, Prague, Czech Republic, May 15-17, 2017. Linköping University Electronic Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.3384/ecp17132111.

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Midor, Katarzyna. "DIRECTIONS OF POST-MINING AREAS REVITALIZATION IN A SELECTED AREA OF POLISH-CZECH BORDERLAND." In 15th International Multidisciplinary Scientific GeoConference SGEM2015. Stef92 Technology, 2011. http://dx.doi.org/10.5593/sgem2015/b13/s3.029.

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Urbanovská, Karolína, and Josef Kunc. "Nákupní preference mladé generace a on-line nakupování." In XXIII. mezinárodní kolokvium o regionálních vědách / 23rd International Colloquium on Regional Sciences. Masaryk University Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.5817/cz.muni.p210-9610-2020-36.

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The young generation born in the mid-1990s and later is referred to as Generation Z. As the only post-war generation, they grew entirely on the World Wide Web and has been increasingly associated with the rapid increase in daily use of technology on a daily basis. Mainly the Internet and smart mobile phones have become an indispensable part of their lives and are often used in consumer preferences and during shopping. The paper focuses on the analysis and evaluation of selected results of Generation Z research in the Czech Republic in relation to shopping behaviour and on-line shopping. In terms of methodology, the research is based on an extensive quantitative questionnaire survey among members of a given generation in the Czech Republic. The results show that Generation Z a bit surprisingly prefers shopping in a brick-and-mortar store compared to online shopping. On the other hand, Czech young population not surprisingly spends the largest expenditures on food, entertainment, clothing and footwear, housing and travel, and this product mix is also reflected in the frequency of visits. This finding may be important for retailers and managers because, despite the ever-increasing implementation of smart technologies and an online lifestyle across all generations, brick-and-mortar businesses are still competitive to face this trend.
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Marx-Schubach, Thomas, and Gerhard Schmitz. "Optimizing the start-up process of post-combustion capture plants by varying the solvent flow rate." In The 12th International Modelica Conference, Prague, Czech Republic, May 15-17, 2017. Linköping University Electronic Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.3384/ecp17132121.

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Strouhal, Jiri, and Petra Štamfestová. "Financial Performance of Czech Sugar Refineries: Case Study Testing the Post-Crisis Period 2010-2013." In 5th International Conference on Accounting, Auditing, and Taxation (ICAAT 2016). Atlantis Press, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.2991/icaat-16.2016.43.

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Binková, Kristýna. "LIFELONG LEARNING AND POST MILITARY EMPLOYABILITY: THE CASE OF SOLDIERS OF THE CZECH ARMED FORCES." In 10th International Conference on Education and New Learning Technologies. IATED, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.21125/edulearn.2018.1816.

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