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Course, academic year 2023/2024
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Czech Exilic Literature and Textual Practices in the 17th Century - YBEC185
Title: Czech Exilic Literature and Textual Practices in the 17th Century
Guaranteed by: Programme SHV - Language and Literature Module (24-KO)
Faculty: Faculty of Humanities
Actual: from 2023
Semester: winter
E-Credits: 4
Examination process: winter s.:
Hours per week, examination: winter s.:2/0, C [HT]
Capacity: 20 / unknown (20)
Min. number of students: unlimited
4EU+: no
Virtual mobility / capacity: no
Key competences:  
State of the course: taught
Language: English
Teaching methods: full-time
Teaching methods: full-time
Level:  
Note: course can be enrolled in outside the study plan
enabled for web enrollment
Guarantor: PhDr. Vladimír Urbánek, Ph.D.
Teacher(s): PhDr. Vladimír Urbánek, Ph.D.
Class: Courses available to incoming students
Annotation - Czech
Last update: PhDr. Vladimír Urbánek, Ph.D. (19.09.2023)
The course will focus on Latin and vernacular works from the 1620s-60s, whose genres range between consolatory literature, astrological-chronological works, historical treatises, calendars, eschatological writings, prophecies and revelations. These works were written mostly in the milieu of the post-White-Mountain exile and responded to the experience of the shattering of all previous certainties and of a radical change in the religious, political and cultural situation in the Bohemian lands. The course aims to present not only major authors, such as Jan Amos Comenius, but also lesser known figures (Partlicius, Habervešl, Felgenhauer) and the topics related to the period scholarly discourse and political propaganda. The circulation of these texts within the exilic circles and in the context of wider communication networks of the European Republic of letters will be also discussed. Some of the texts will be available in English translations. Students are required to read and discuss extracts from these texts and secondary literature. Some of the topics listed below will take two classes. 1) Introduction: Post-1620 exiles from the Bohemian lands; Latin and vernacular literary production and its genres; textual practices and strategies; new perspectives 2) Confessional identities and confessional polemics: refugee churches 3) How to cope with a crisis? The Labyrinth of the World and the Neo-Stoic Solution 4) Transfer of knowledge and self-presentation of exiles 5) Astrology, chronology and millenarianism: Simeon Partlicius and Jan Amos Comenius 6) Political and historical discourse: Pavel Stránský of Zápy, Ondřej Habervešl, and Pavel Skála of Zhoř 7) Between history and martyrology: The History of the Bohemian Persecution in its Latin and vernacular versions 8) Projects of Universal Reform: Pansophia and the Reform of Human Affairs 9) New Prophets between radical religious discourse and political propaganda; Thirty Years War and visual propaganda 10) Correspondence networks, intellectual communication in exile, and the republic of letters
Syllabus
Last update: PhDr. Vladimír Urbánek, Ph.D. (04.10.2023)

1) Introduction: Post-1620 exiles from the Bohemian lands; Latin and vernacular literary production and its genres; textual practices and strategies; new perspectives

2) Confessional identities and confessional polemics: refugee churches

3) How to cope with a crisis? The Labyrinth of the World and the Neo-Stoic Solution

4) Transfer of knowledge and self-presentation of exiles

5) Astrology, chronology and millenarianism: Simeon Partlicius and Jan Amos Comenius

6) Political and historical discourse: Pavel Stránský of Zápy, Ondřej Habervešl, and Pavel Skála of Zhoř

7) Between history and martyrology: The History of the Bohemian Persecution in its Latin and vernacular versions

8) Projects of Universal Reform: Pansophia and the Reform of Human Affairs

9) New Prophets between radical religious discourse and political propaganda; Thirty Years War and visual propaganda

10) Correspondence networks, intellectual communication in exile, and the republic of letters

 
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