Národní úložiště šedé literatury Nalezeno 3 záznamů.  Hledání trvalo 0.00 vteřin. 
Musician and audience: stage production and reception of Czech traditional music
Vejvoda, Zdeněk
Folk music in Bohemia started to find use as a social and political phenomenon as early as the 19th century, a time known as the Czech National Revival. Whereas Czech folk songs were collected by the thousand, in line with the romanticizing ideas of nationalism then sweeping across Europe, dance music performed in people's everyday lives remained long outside collectors' attention. The development of music folklore performed on stage was largely influenced by two exhibitions held in Prague – the Jubilee Exhibition in 1891 and the Czech-Slavonic Ethnographic Exhibition in 1895. Adaptations and stage presentations were becoming increasingly important research issues. A new impulse came from the inter-war avant-garde, whereas in the mid-20th century, the Czechoslovak Radio adopted a crucial role in the process. All that had a significant effect on the life and work of amateur “folklore” ensembles.
Traditional dancing on the stage: seeking authenticity
Stavělová, Daniela
The study focuses on the thinking and perception about traditional dancing when put on the stage in the Czech Republic. The paper views the cultural backround, as well as the political and social contexts which create specific conditions for existence of traditional dance culture on the stage. There is a discourse of cultural heritage preservation, political uses of folklore and the recreational aim of the folk movement.

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