National Repository of Grey Literature 2 records found  Search took 0.00 seconds. 
The tranformations of poetry and view of it between years 1955 and 1959
Márová, Kristýna ; Bednařík, Petr (advisor) ; Cebe, Jan (referee)
- Květen In the second half of 1950's there started a continuo possibility to criticize some of the Party's prominent figures or art the Party promoted, and Kohout's poetry; disputations about the artistic heritage of František Halas; the questions of socialist realism by periodical Květen; and 'the end of the Second congress' spirit', which made end to these
Magazine Květen
Mečíř, Vojtěch ; Houda, Přemysl (advisor) ; Franc, Martin (referee)
Kveten was a monthly magazine for literature and art (and by its third year also for "life"), which was published under the auspices of the Union of Czechoslovak Writers from September 1956 to June 1959. It was founded as a magazine for "aspiring writers", but quite soon this concept proved to be unsustainable and members of the editorial board started to give the magazine its own new look, which got even a more comprehensible form during the II. Czechoslovak Writers Congress, after young poets (and theorists) manifested the "Poetry of Everyday Life". It was, however, defined quite generally and maybe even vaguely, which is the fact the authors were struggling with during the following year. At the same time they are exposed to the pressure of official authorities as "anti-revisionism" began to destroy liberal environment that prevailed around 1956. Kveten tried to resist this tendency. In addition, at that time young theorists found a firmer basis, which gradually became unacceptable for the regime. At the beginning of 1959 there comes a wave of heavy critcism and results in abolishing the magazine. In my thesis I demonstrate through archival research, oral history and semiotic analysis that despite the abolition the management of Kveten maintained the principle of "partiality" and is guilty rather for...

Interested in being notified about new results for this query?
Subscribe to the RSS feed.