Prague in Black and Gold: Scenes from the Life of a European City (105 page)

BOOK: Prague in Black and Gold: Scenes from the Life of a European City
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Alexander Vegesack (ed.),
Czech Cubism: 1910-1925
(New York, 1992), richly documented.
 
Gustav Janouch,
Jaroslav Hašek
(Bern, 1966), to be read with caution.
Cecil Perrot,
The Bad Bohemian
(London, 1978), best book in English, written by former British Ambassador to Prague.
Jaroslav Krížek,
Jaroslav Hašek v revolu
ním Rusku
(Prague, 1957), full story of Hašek, the adventurous Bolshevik.
 
Radko Pytlík,
Jaroslav Hašek a dobrý
voják Švejk
(Prague, 1983).
 
Markéta Brousek,
Der Poetismus: die Lehrjahre der tschechischen Avantgarde und ihrer marxistischen Kritiker
(Munich, 1975).
Kv
toslav Chvatfk,
Die Prager Moderne
(Frankfurt, 1991), with an introduction by Milan Kundera.
———, and Zden
k Posat,
Poetismus
(Prague, 1967), illuminating anthology, amply illustrated.
Marie and Václav Kubín,
Magické zrcadlo: Anthologie poetismu
(Prague, 1982).
Vít
zslav Nezval,
Moderní básnické sm
ry
(Prague, 1964), his views of contemporary poetry.
Ji
í 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, Ji
i 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).
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
Babi
ka
(
The Grandmother)
(N
mcová)
Bachá
ek, 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
Bechy
ka, 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 centralization 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
Bo
ivoj, Duke
Bosch, Hieronymus
Bourbons
Božet
cha
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
B
etislav I, Duke
“B
etislav [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

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