Book Read Free

Prague in Black and Gold: Scenes from the Life of a European City

Page 56

by Peter Demetz


  Kvtoslav Chvatfk, Die Prager Moderne (Frankfurt, 1991), with an introduction by Milan Kundera.

  ———, and Zdenk Posat, Poetismus (Prague, 1967), illuminating anthology, amply illustrated.

  Marie and Václav Kubín, Magické zrcadlo: Anthologie poetismu (Prague, 1982).

  Vítzslav Nezval, Moderní básnické smry (Prague, 1964), his views of contemporary poetry.

  Jií Voskovec and Jan Werich, Máme za to (Prague, 1990), the old songs live on.

  Karl-Heinz Jahn (ed.), Das Prager Kaffeehaus (Berlin, 1988), East German nostalgia for the old Prague cafés.

  Jürgen Born (ed.), Deutschsprachige Literatur Prags und Böhmens im ersten Viertel des 20. Jahrhunderts: Tabellarische Ubersicht und Bibliographie (Wuppertal, 2nd ed. 1988).

  Max Brod, Der Prager Kreis (Frankfurt, 1979) with a (skeptical) postscript by Peter Demetz.

  Gilles Deleuze and Félix Guattari, “What Is a Minor Literature?” in Mark Anderson (ed.) Reading Kafka: Prague, Politics, and the Fin de Siècle (New York, 1989), pp. 80—94.

  Ingeborg Fiala-Fürst, Der Beitrag der Prager deutschen Literatur zum deutschen literarischen Expressionismus (St. Ingbert, 1996), comprehensive, with excellent bibliography.

  Marino Freschi, Saggi di letteratura Pragese (Naples, 1987).

  ———, La Praga di Kafka (Naples, 1990).

  Eduard Goldstücker (ed.), Weltfreunde: Konferenz über die Prager deutsche Literatur (Prague, 1967), within the limits of the (then) possibilities.

  Helena Kanyar-Becker, “Eine verhängnisvolle Liebe: Zur Pragerdeutschen Literatur,” in Leben der GrenzelTheorie der Grenze (Würzburg, 1995), pp. 67—88.

  Milan Tvrdík, “Paul Eisner-Vermittler deutschsprachiger Literatur der böhmischen Länder,” in Dokumente: Germanistentreffen BRD-CSFR (Bonn, 1992), pp. 47-57.

  Giuliano Baioni, Kafka: letteratura ed hebraismo (Turin, 1984), valuable discussion of Kafka and the Jewish tradition.

  Hartmut Binder (ed.), Kafka Handbuch (Stuttgart, 1979), 2 vols., everything you ever wanted to know about Kafka, and more, by distinguished European and American scholars and critics.

  Josef Cermák, “Franz Kafkas Sorgen mit der tschechischen Sprache,” in Kurt Krolop und Hans Dieter Zimmermann (eds.), Kafka und Prag, Colloquium im Goethe Institut, November 24-27, 1992 (Berlin and New York, 1994), pp. 59—66.

  Eduard Goldstücker (ed.), Kafka aus Prager Sicht (Prague, 1965), papers read at a Prague Conference rescuing Kafka for the Communist world; retrospectively, Jii Stromšfk, “Ein Rückblick von 1991,” in Norbert Wiener and Wolfgang Kraus (eds.), Franz Kafka in der kommunistischen Welt, (Vienna and Cologne, 1993), pp. 120-43 - Schriftenreihe der ästerreichischen Kafka-Gesellschaft, 5. K

  urt Krolop, “Hinweis auf eine verschollene Rundfrage: Wann haben Sie Prag verlassen?” Germanistica Pragensia, 4 (1966), 47—64.

  ———, and Hans Dieter Zimmermann (eds.), Kafka und Prag (Frankfurt, 1987); contributors include Margarita Pazi, Rio Preisner, and others.

  Marta Marková-Motyková, Mýtus Milena (Prague, 1993), demythologizing the icon Milena Jesenská.

  Antonio Pasinato, Praga: Mito e letteratura: 1900—39 (Florence, 1993).

  Christoph Stölzl, Kafkas böses Böhmen: Zur Sozialgeschichte eines Prager Juden (Munich, 1975).

  Alena Wagnerová, Milena Jesenská: Eine Biographie (Mannheim, 1994).

  Index

  The index that appeared in the print version of this title does not match the pages of your eBook. Please use the search function on your eReading device to search for terms of interest. For your reference, the terms that appear in the print index are listed below.

  Abduction from the Seraglio, The (Mozart)

  Abraham, F. Murray

  Abraham ben Azriel

  Academic Legion

  Academy of Music

  Ackermann aus Böhmen, Der (The Plowman from Bohemia) (Johannes of Tepl)

  Adam, Daniel

  Adamites

  Adam of Dietrichstein

  Adam of Stemberg

  Adler, Friedrich

  Adler, H. G.

  Aehrenthal, Count

  Aeneid (Virgil)

  Agnes

  Agrarian Party

  Agrippa

  Ailly, Pierre d’

  Aktion, Die

  Alba (Václav II).

  Albrecht of Waldstein

  Alexander IV, Pope

  Alexander the Great

  Alexandreis

  Allied War Council

  Amadeus (Shaffer)

  Anabaptists

  Andrássy, Count Gyula

  Andrews, John

  Anežka (daughter of Tomáš of Štítný)

  Anežka, St.

  Angelo (pharmacist to Charles IV)

  Anna, Queen

  Anna of Frimburg

  Anna of Mochov

  Anna of Schweidnitz

  Anne, Princess

  Anza, David ben Salomon, see Gans, David

  Aostalli, Giovanni Mario

  Apollinaire, Guillaume

  Arabs

  Arbes, Jakub

  Arcimboldo, Giuseppe

  Aristotle

  Amestus of Pardubice, Archbishop of Prague

  Arnold, Christoph

  Arnold, Emanuel

  Arnold, Ignaz Ferdinand

  Arnold of Senckendorf

  Arnsteiner. Adam

  Arnulf, King of East Franconia

  Arugat ha-Bosem (The Spice Garden) (Abraham ben Azriel)

  Ascension of the Virgin Mary, brotherhood of

  Ästhetisches Lexikon (Jeitteles)

  Augsburger Allgemeine Zeitung

  Augusta, Jan

  Augustin, Nicholas

  Augustine, St.

  Augustinians

  Auschwitz concentration camp

  Austria As It Is (Sealsfield)

  Austrian Estates

  Avars

  Baal Shem, Elijah

  Babika (The Grandmother) (Nmcová)

  Bacháek, Martin

  Baer, Reymers

  Baglioni, Antonio

  Bakunin, Mikhail

  Balada z hadr (A Ballad of Rags) (Voskovec and Werich)

  Balduin, Archbishop of Trier

  Barclay, John

  Barifis, Giovanni Domenico

  Bamabites

  Barrande, Joachim

  Barrandov film studios

  Barthes, Roland

  Bartoš, F. M.

  Basel Agreement

  Bassani, Giacobba dei

  Bassevi, Jacob

  Bassi, Luigi

  Bassompierre, François

  Basta, Giorgio

  Baxa, Karel

  Beaumarchais, Pierre-Augustin Caron de

  Bechyka, Jan

  Bedtick of Bilá

  Be’er ha-Golah (Loew)

  Beggar’s Opera, The (Gay)

  Beguines

  Béla, King of Hungary

  Belgioioso, Count Barbiano de

  Belgioioso, Francesco de

  “Bella Mia Fiamma!” (Mozart)

  Belle-Isle, Charles Duke of

  Benedict XIII, Pope

  Benedictines

  Beneš (artist)

  Beneš, Eduard

  Beneš of Vartemberk

  Benešová, Hana

  Bergmann, Hugo

  Bertati, Gioanni

  Berthold of Bamberg

  Beschreibung eines Kampfes (Description of a Fight) (Kafka)

  Bezru, Petr

  Biarritz (Goedsche)

  Bible; Book of Daniel; translations of

  Bismarck, Otto von

  Black Lamb and Grey Falcon (West)

  Black Rose school

  Blanc, Louis

  Blanche of Valois

  Blažena

  Blum, Leon

  Bocskay, István

  Boethius

  Bohemia (Kafka)

  Bohemia (steamship)

  Bohemian Brethren

  Bohemian Confession

  Bohemian Estates; and c
entralization of Hapsburg power; Maria Theresa and; opera patronized by; and revolution of 1848,; during Thirty Years’ War

  Bohuslav, Magister

  Bohuslav of Michalovice

  Boleslav I, Emperor

  Bolsheviks

  Bolzano, Bernard

  Bondini, Caterina

  Bondini, Pasquale

  Boniface IX, Pope

  Boreš of Riesenburk

  Boivoj, Duke

  Bosch, Hieronymus

  Bourbons

  Božetcha

  Bragadino, Marko

  Brahe, Tycho

  Brandeis, Louis

  Brandeis, Samson

  Brandt, Karl

  Brauner, František

  Braunschweig, Heinrich Julius, Duke of

  Brecht, Bertolt

  Brentano, Clemens

  Brentano, Franz

  Bretfeld, Baron

  Betislav I, Duke

  “Betislav [and] Jitka” (Thám)

  Breton, André

  Bfezina, Otokar

  Brocco, Antonio

  Brod, Max

  Bronze Age

  Bruderzwist in Habsburg, Ein (A Conflict of Hapsburg Brothers) (Grillparzer)

  Brueghel, Pieter, the elder

  Brunian, Johann Joseph

  Bruno, Giordano

  Bruno of Schauenburg

  Brus, Antonín

  Buber, Martin

  Buckle, Henry Thomas

  Bucolicum Carmen (Bucolic Poem) (Petrarch)

  Budova, Václav

  Bulla, Franz

  Bulla, Karel

  Buonsignori, Buonsignore de

  Buquoy, Count

  Bürgi, Jost

  Caesar, Julius

  Calvin, John

  Calvinists

  Cambridge University

  Campanus, Jan

  Campion, Edmund

  Canal, Count

  Candacis, Queen

  Capek, Josef

  Capek, Karel

  Capuchins

  Caravaggio

  Carmelites

  Carolingian empire

  Carrotti, Francesco

  Carthusians

  Casanova, Giovanni Giacomo

  Casopis eského Musea (Journal of the Bohemian Museum)

  Castle, The (Kafka)

  Castrucci, Cosimo

  Catherine, St.

  Catholics; of Baroque period; Bechyka on; Charles II and; coalition of Ultraquists and; and Czech independence; early, see Christianity, coming of; Ferdinand I and; Guelf-Ghibelline conflict; heretics and(see also Hussites); Italian; Jews and; Maximilian II and; Otakar II and; progressive; Rudolf II and— ; in Thirty Years’ War; see also Inquisition; specific orders

  “Celebration of the Rosary” (Dürer)

  Celts

  enk of Wartenberk

  ermák, Josef

  ermínková, Marie

  ernín, Diviš

  Cervantes, Miguel de

  eská Vela (Czech Bee)

  eské Listy (Czech Pages) (Kapper)

  Chaplin, Charlie

  Charlemagne

  Charles I, Emperor of Austria-Hungary

  Charles IV, Emperor; architectural projects of; Augustinians and; essential ideological concept of; German language and; Jews and; marriages of; Petrarch and; physical appearance of; and Pemyslids; religious conflict and; in Smetana’s opera; university established by

  Charles V, Emperor

  Charles VI, Emperor

  Charles X, King of France

  Charles of Anjou

  Charles University

  Chateaubriand, Vicomte François-Auguste René de

  Chekhov, Anton

  Chelický, Peter

  Chochol, Josef

  Chotek, Count Karl

  Christian IV, King of Denmark

  Christianity: coming of; conversion of Jews to; guilds and; history and; ideal of love in; law and; literature and; and religious tolerance; sociology of; see also Catholics; Protestants; specific denominations

  Christian Socialists

  Christina, Queen of Sweden

  Chudoba, Bohdan

  Cistercians

  Cividale, University of

  Clara

  Claretus, Magister

  Clement VI, Pope

  Clement VII, Pope

  Clement-Simon, M.

  Clemenza di Tito, La (Mozart)

  Clinton, Bill

  Collegium Clementinum

  Colmar Chronicles

  Colonna of Völz

  Columbia College

  Comenius

  Communists; see also Stalinism

  Concordia corps

  Congress of Oppressed Austrian Nationalities

  “Conquest of Alexandria, The” (Machaut)

  Constantin

  Constitutioneller Verein (Constitutional Club)

  Copernicus, Nicolaus

  Cortesi, Francesco

  Cosmas

  Cosmic Mystery (Kepler)

  Cossa, Baldassarre, see John XXIII, Pope

  Costanza e Fortezza (Constancy and Courage) (opera)

  Coudenhove, Count Max

  Counter-Reformation

  Crawford, Francis Marion

  Crécy, Battle of

  tyi Doby (Four Seasons) (Nmcová)

  Cubism

  ch, Jan

  Cumans

  Cunningham, Colonel

  Cyriaks

  Cyril

  Czech, Ludwig

  Czech Academic Union

  Czech Brethren, see Bohemian Brethren

  Czech Citizens’ Club

  Czech Club of Architects

  Czech-German Group of Eight

  Czech National Council

  Czech National Gallery

  Czech People’s Party

  Czech University

  Dada

  Dali, Salvador

  Dalimil

  Daniel Deronda (Eliot)

  Dante

  Dávidek, Pan

  David-Rhonfeld, Valerie

  De cervecia (On Beer) (Hájek).

  Dedera, Franz

  Dee, John

  Deists

  Deleuze, Gilles

  Della pubblica felicità oggetto de’ buoni principi (Muratori)

  Delmedigo, Joseph Salomon

  Demetz, Anna

  Demetz, Hans

  Demetz, Karl

  Denifle, Heinrich

  Denzio, Antonio

  Deodatus, Georgios

  Dpold of Lobkovic

  Descartes, René

  Deschamps, Jean

  Dessau Bauhaus

  Deutsch, Emmanuel

  Deutsche Demokratische Freiheitspartei (German Democratic Freedom Party)

  Devtsil group

  De viris illustribus (On Famous Men) (Petrarch)

  de Witte, Hans

  Deym, Count Friedrich

  Dickens, Charles

  Diderot, Denis

  Dientzenhofer, Kilian Ignaz

  Divá Bára (The Wild Bára) (Nmcová)

  Divi, Mikuláš

  Divšek, Mikeš

  Dobner, Gelasius

  Dobrovský, Josef

  Dohna, Baron Christopher

  Doktor Faustus (Mann)

  Dominicans

  Don Carlos, Prince of Spain

  Don Giovanni (Mozart)

  Don Juan of Austria

  Donne, John

  Drahomira

  Drändorf, Johannes

  Dresden school of the Holy Spirit

  Dryden, John

  Dual Monarchy

  Dra of Bethlehem

  Dürer, Albrecht

  Dürnkrut, Battle of

  Dušek, František

  Dušek, Josefa

  Dvoák, Antonin

  Dvorník, Francis

  Ebert, Karl Egon

  Eckhart, Meister

  Edel, Moshe

  Edward I, King of England

  Eggenberg family

  Eichendorff, Josef von

  Einander (
To Each Other) (Werfel)

  Einsiedel, Christoph von

  Einstein, Albert

  Eisenlohr (German ambassador)

  Eisner, Paul

  Eleonore, Princess of Liechtenstein

  Eliot, George

  Elisabeth of Pomerania

  Eliška, Queen

  Eliška of Kravaf

  Elizabeth, Queen (wife of Friedrich)

  Elizabeth I, Queen of England

  Eluard, Paul

  Emilia Galotti (Lessing)

  Engels, Friedrich

  Enlightenment; Jewish

  Ense, Rahel von

  Ense, Vamhagen von

  Eppinge, Friedrich

  Erben, Karel Jaromfr

  Ernst, Prince

  Erwin, Egon

  Eschenbach, Wolfram von

  Estates of Lower Austria

  Etzenbach, Ulrich von

  Euchd

  Evangelicals

  Evans, R.J.W

  expressionists

  Fabricius, Johannes

  Faster, Petr

  Feigl, Friedrich

  Ferdinand I, Emperor

  Ferdinand II, Emperor

  Ferdinand III, Emperor

  Fiala, Zdenek

  Fiedler, Maria

  Fieravanti, Aristotele

  Filippi, Giovanni

  Finkenzeller, Jeli

  Finsterwalde, Treaty of

  Fleckeles, Eleazar

  Forchheim, agreements of

  Ford, Henry

  Forman, Milo

  Founding of Prague, The (Brentano)

  Four Prague Articles

  Fourteen Points

  Franciscans

  Francis Stephen of Lothringia

  Franco, Francisco

  Franco, Magister

  Frank, Jakob

  Frank, Josef

  Frank, Karl Hermann

  Frankfurt Assembly

  Frankists

  Franz I, Emperor

  Franz Josef I, Emperor

  Franz Kafka Society

  Fratres Minores

  Frauenlob

  Frederick II, Emperor

  Frederick the Belligerent, Duke of Babenberg

  Frederick the Great, King of Prussia

  Freiberg, Heinrich von

  Freisinnige Partei

  Freithof, Paltram vor dem

  French, Peter J.

  Freud, Sigmund

  Frit, Josef Vaclav

  Friedjung, Heinrich

  Friedrich, King

  Fröhlich, Kathi

  Froissart, Jean

  Fröschel, Daniel

  Fruhwein, Martin

  Fuchs, Josef

  Fuík, Julius

  Furlani, Giacomo

  futurism

  Futurista, Ferenc

  Fynes, Moryson

  Galerie der Sippurim (Pascheles)

  Galileo Galilei

  Gallas, Christian Count

  Gans, David

  Garcia troupe

  Gare Generose, Le (Generous Competitions) (Paisiello)

  Gau, Vilém

  Gauguin, Paul

  Gay, John

  Gebauer, Jan

 

‹ Prev