Course: Introduction to Czech Culture II

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Course title Introduction to Czech Culture II
Course code KDT/866
Organizational form of instruction Lecture
Level of course Master
Year of study 2
Frequency of the course Each academic year
Semester Summer
Number of ECTS credits 4
Language of instruction English
Status of course Compulsory
Form of instruction unspecified
Work placements unspecified
Recommended optional programme components None
Course availability The course is available to visiting students
Lecturer(s)
  • Polanecký Jaroslav, PhDr. Ph.D.
Course content
These informations are in the annotation of the course.

Learning activities and teaching methods
unspecified, unspecified
Learning outcomes
In this course, students will become acquainted with the Czech cultural milieu and its placement into a broader Central European context. The lectures programme will focus on systematic and cross-sectional presentation of outstanding figures of literature (Hašek, Čapek, Werfel, Brod, Kafka, Hrabal, and Kundera), music (Dvořák, Janáček, and Martinů), theatre (prewar avant-garde, Krejča, Radok), ballet (Kilián, Klimentová) and film ("new wave") who have worked in the context of the Czech lands. The course will focus on a description of the Czech Republic as a country, which history and even the geographical position are markedly influencing and inspiring moment of various creative activities. The subject has a comparative character; the Czech lands, but also the surrounding countries and nations are presented as part of a bigger entity, which individual parts have been changing in various times under influence of both external and internal historical events, but whose common existence has always reflected the picture of a broader coherent entity. The course programme will use a chronological historical method as a guidepost to facilitate and unify the viewpoints of the lectures. The compendium of historical turning points will respect the different level of students' input foreknowledge. Therefore, the basic knowledge structure that will become the output platform of the course participants will be a general overview of historical events, their reflection in a general historical context and orientation in the most basic specific author's approaches in the whole range of artistic disciplines. Although the sense of the course is edification, there will be emphasis on the points, in which students can find a parallel in experience arising from perception of their own cultures. The course will not leave out the language and national variety and multiculturalism of inhabitants of the Czech lands until 1945, and will analyze it in the contrast with the different development and the political seclusion of the following years. A specific section will deal with culture originating under pressure of the Nazi and communist dictatorships. 1. Brno and its cultural milieu. Villa Tugendhat; Pavel Haas; Vitka Kapralova; Lidove Noviny. 2. Jindrich Chalupecky and Group 1942. 3. Sorela style - Search for a New Man living under the New Rules in New Society; current retromania. 4. Icons of Czechoslavakian Design; EXPO Brussels. 5. Cultural Revolt of the 1960's - theatre companies of small forms; appearance of Vaclav Havel. 6. -7. FAMU and A New Wave; Ivan Passer, Milos Forman, Vera Chytilova, Jiri Menzel, Juraj Herz). 8. Czechoslovakian Glass Production; EXPO Montreal; KINOAUTOMAT. 9. Czech Culture in Exile: Skvorecky, Tigrid, Toyen, Kupka, Kundera, Koudelka, Mladkova, Kylian. 10. Bohumil Hrabal: Closely Watched Reality. 11. Escapes from the cities: Tramping and Gardening.
The gained capabilities constitute an encompassment and an aquirement of knowledge and experience in the given field of study, they result from a concrete annotation of the subject and are aimed at a profile´s fulfilment of the graduate of the given field of study.
Prerequisites
Successful completion of the previous study

Assessment methods and criteria
unspecified
Project
Recommended literature
  • Bauer, Otto. Question of Nationalities. University of Minnesota, 2000.
  • Bruthansová, T.; Králíček J. Czech 100 Design Icons. Praha, 2005.
  • Brych, Vladimir. A Thousand Years of Czech Culture, Riches from the National Museum in Prague. Old Salem, 1996.
  • Films. Forman, M. Lovers of a Blonde (1965); Herz, J. Cremator (1969); Chytilová, V. Daisies (1996); Nezle, J. Closely Watched Trains (1996); Passer, I. Intimate Ligting (1965).
  • Hrabal, Bohumil. I served a King of England. Vintage Classics, 2009.
  • Karous, P. (ed.). Vetřelci a volavky (Atlas výtvarného umění ve veřejném prostoru v Československu v období normalizace (1968-1989). Arbor Vitae, Řevnice, 2013.
  • Kundera, M. The Unbereable Lightness of Being. Harper Perrenial, 2009.
  • Michajlová, S. Volný čas. Utopie na hranicích všednosti. NG, 2013.
  • Sachar, Howard, M. Dreamland, Europeans and Jews in the Aftermath of the Great War. Knopf Press, 2002.
  • Saver, Derek. The Coasts of Bohemia, A Czech History. Princeton University Press, 1998.
  • Spector, Scott. Prague Territories, National Conflict and Cultural Innovation in Franz Kafka´s Fin de Si?cle. University of California, 2000.
  • Storti, Craig. The Art of Crossing Cultures. Nicholas Breatey Pub, 2001.
  • Škvorecký, J. The Cowards. Ecco Press, 1980.


Study plans that include the course
Faculty Study plan (Version) Category of Branch/Specialization Recommended year of study Recommended semester