National Repository of Grey Literature 2 records found  Search took 0.03 seconds. 
The image of Helen
Chlupáčová, Edita ; Rytíř, Jaroslav (advisor) ; Fischerová, Sylva (referee)
The thesis describes a corpus of Greek archaic and classic poetic texts, where Helen and her eidōlon appear next to each other. As for the methodology, the thesis took its shape in the frame of French classical philology and structuralism. It is shown that the concept of eidōlon in several ways opens up the question of re-production, both biologic and poetic. As a sign, the eidōlon signifies an oscilation between a speech sign and an image, which poses the question of time and space. The singularity of the concept of eidōlon is being related to the present by comparison with photography as conceived by Roland Barthes. The thesis examines potency of the chosen methodology in relation to its object, therefore by simulation it examines how it is possible to write about the Greeks today and how Roland Barthes wrote about the Greeks, from which follows the search for possibilities of application of Barthes'concepts of studium, punctum, mathesis singularis. Subthesis is a proposition that Barthes' Camera Lucida is in dialogue with Plato's Phaedrus.
The image of Helen
Chlupáčová, Edita ; Rytíř, Jaroslav (advisor) ; Fischerová, Sylva (referee)
The thesis describes a corpus of Greek archaic and classic poetic texts, where Helen and her eidōlon appear next to each other. As for the methodology, the thesis took its shape in the frame of French classical philology and structuralism. It is shown that the concept of eidōlon in several ways opens up the question of re-production, both biologic and poetic. As a sign, the eidōlon signifies an oscilation between a speech sign and an image, which poses the question of time and space. The singularity of the concept of eidōlon is being related to the present by comparison with photography as conceived by Roland Barthes. The thesis examines potency of the chosen methodology in relation to its object, therefore by simulation it examines how it is possible to write about the Greeks today and how Roland Barthes wrote about the Greeks, from which follows the search for possibilities of application of Barthes'concepts of studium, punctum, mathesis singularis. Subthesis is a proposition that Barthes' Camera Lucida is in dialogue with Plato's Phaedrus.

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