Czech-Slovak Literary Relations in the 1830s and 1840s: Josef Kajetan Tyl and Czech-Slovak Mutuality

被引:0
|
作者
Zelenkova, Anna [1 ]
机构
[1] Acad Sci Czech Republ, Slavonic Inst, Valentinska 1, Prague 11000, Czech Republic
来源
PRIMERJALNA KNJIZEVNOST | 2015年 / 38卷 / 01期
关键词
Czech literature; Slovak literature; 19th cent; literary relations; Tyl; Josef K; Chmelensky;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
I3/7 [各国文学];
学科分类号
摘要
The paper explores the growing interest of Czech literary circles in the Slovak cultural scene during the 1830s and 1840s. It was then that this attention was reflected in the increasing quantity of Slovak publications in Czech periodicals (namely, in Josef Kajetan Tyl's Kvety and in the more frequent occurrence of Slovak themes in the works of Czech authors. Standing for more than an interesting, "exotic" theme, "Slovakness" became part of the Czech concept of literary mutuality and its endeavor to pursue a cultural and language alliance within the tribal unity. Among the Slovak themes introduced to the Czech context, special appeal was held by the character of the tinker, often perceived as a particular type of Slovak patriot with Romantic attributes. As a character in a Czech setting, the tinker first appeared in Josef Krasoslav Chmelensky's libretto for Dratenik (The Tinker), the first Czech opera by Frantisek Skroup. Similarly, in Tyl's short story "Pomnenky z Rozteze" (Forget-Me-Nots from Roztez), the tinkers character typifies love for the country and the conflict of "reason" and "heart." Whereas in Chmelensky the tinker is a potent symbol of mutuality, Tyl's character, sentimental though he may be, features discontentedness reminiscent of Karel Hynek Macha, representing a social outside class and a lonely man (in the book form, the tinker speaks Slovak). In the early 1840s, Tyl came to the conclusion that Slovak endeavors to establish a national language did not to hinder the traditional collaboration with Czechs, who could understand Slovak in a work of art.
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页码:145 / 153
页数:9
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