National Repository of Grey Literature 12 records found  previous11 - 12  jump to record: Search took 0.00 seconds. 
Critical literary discourse and its media coverage on example of Vladimír Novotný
Janáková, Barbora ; Šoltys, Otakar (advisor) ; Čeňková, Jana (referee)
Czech critical literary discourse has been formed for many centuries. Its development was affected by movements in artistic styles and political changes, development of technological environment and was shaped by mediatization in last two decades. Typical representative of current critical literary discourse is Vladimir Novotny. This work would be able to describe current critical literary discourse and also outline its future development, by analyzing literary criticisms written by Vladimir Novotny and comparing his work with essays of other critics. This work will also compare two other present literary critics. First one is Josef Chuchma who has been managing section Culture in daily news MF DNES for eighteen years. Martin C. Putna is famous Czech literary scientist, philosopher and religionist. The aim of this thesis is to compare of essays of Josef Chuchma and Martin C. Putna to find mediatizating tendencies and describe their influence on critical literary discourse. In the section of the annexes is comprehensive interview with Vladimir Novotny which shows that literary critics realize tendencies of mediatization in critical literary discourse. Literary critics are not able to name them properly, but they can express them.
The Legacy of the Japanese Pacific Empire within the Cold War
Janáková, Barbora ; Hnízdo, Bořivoj (advisor) ; Romancov, Michael (referee)
From the early twentieth century, Japan has been central to any conception of the Asia-Pacific as a region. In the build-up to and during the Pacific War this found expression primarily in the abortive attempt to impose an economic empire by force. After 1945 Japan emerged as the most dynamic economic centre of the region within a strategic and economic order established by the United States. The idea of a 'Greater East Asia Co-Prosperity Sphere', an attempt to legitimize the Japanese military and political drive for supreme regional power over all the Asia-Pacific in the 1930s and the early 1940s, was launched in early 1941, and signalled Japan's further expansion to the south after the capture of Indochina. Apart from the military and geopolitical aspects of Japanese territorial expansion southwards, the creation of a regional sphere under Japanese supremacy was intimately linked to Japan's growing need for raw materials following the rapid industrialization in the Meiji and Taishō eras. The 'Co-Prosperity Sphere' may be said to have been the first modern attempt to create regional political and economic integration in the Asia-Pacific. It is noteworthy that the geographical extension of the 'Co-Prosperity Sphere' in the early 1940s comprised almost exactly the same region as the Japanese economy came to...

National Repository of Grey Literature : 12 records found   previous11 - 12  jump to record:
See also: similar author names
2 Janáková, Bára
Interested in being notified about new results for this query?
Subscribe to the RSS feed.