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COMPARATIVE-LITERATURE  December 1998

COMPARATIVE-LITERATURE December 1998

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Subject:

(Fwd) Call for Papers

From:

"Howard Gaskill" <[log in to unmask]>

Reply-To:

[log in to unmask]

Date:

Mon, 7 Dec 1998 09:49:48 +0000

Content-Type:

text/plain

Parts/Attachments:

Parts/Attachments

text/plain (90 lines)

------- Forwarded Message Follows -------
Date:          Fri, 4 Dec 1998 15:50:25 +0000 (GMT)
Subject:       CFP- 
From:          Geoffrey Chew <[log in to unmask]>
To:            [log in to unmask]

With apologies for cross-posting: but please re-post freely to any 
interested lists or persons.


Department of Music		Centre for the Study of Central Europe
Royal Holloway College		School of Slavonic and East European Studies
(University of London)		(University of London)

			    CALL FOR PAPERS

			A Tale of Three Cities:
		Janacek's Brno Between Vienna and Prague

	     Friday 22 October 1999 - Sunday 24 October 1999
			Senate House, London WC1

The current reputation of Leos Janacek (1854-1928) as the greatest of
twentieth-century Czech composers was slow in arriving: for the first half
of this century, the canonic succession was assumed to have been inherited
from Smetana and Dvorak by Vitezslav Novak, J. B. Foerster and others. The
change in his fortunes represents a change in the reception of his
particular brand of regionalism: his self-consciousness in belonging to
Moravia, and to its capital city, Brno, which are places that have often
seemed to provide a guarantee of Czech cultural authenticity. 

Yet, even after the pioneering work of John Tyrrell among others, the
cultural self-consciousness of the Moravians is still too little
understood. Using Janacek as a focus, this interdisciplinary conference
will take the opportunity to reassess the self-image of Brno and of
Moravia in the period roughly between 1880 and 1930, within the cultural
contexts of Vienna and Prague, also taking into account wider
international contexts and influences from West and East. It is hoped that
papers will deal with the subject from a variety of disciplinary
viewpoints: literature, political history, music, art history,
architecture, among others; and it is expected that a published volume of
essays will be produced as longer versions of some of the papers given at
the conference. The conference hopes to consider, among others, the
following areas of enquiry: 

*	The aesthetics of the period in Moravia, Bohemia, Austria
*	The Moravian school of criticism
*	Questions of patronage, politics, ideology, sociology
*	Mass political parties and art in the period
*	The Moravian Diet
*	The Moravian Ausgleich
*	Moravian literature of the period
	-	in comparison with other Czech and Austrian literature
	-	in relation to Naturalism, Symbolism, Decadence, 
		Expressionism, etc
	-	in the wider context of Western European or Russian influence
	-	local variants of Naturalism and Decadence
*	Janacek himself
	- 	in comparison to other contemporary Czech or Austrian composers 
		(Novak, Suk, Foerster, Schoenberg, Zemlinsky, Schreker, etc)
	-	the succession (his pupils: Haas, Kapralova, etc)
	-	the impact of the new catalogue of Janacek's works and other
		important items in the secondary literature (publications by
		John Tyrrell, etc)
*	The literariness and artistic taste of Janacek and of other
		contemporaneous composers
*	Catholicism and, or versus, Protestantism
*	Moravian art and architecture of the period
	-	in comparison with other Czech and Austrian art and
		architecture
	-	the "Brno school"
     
Papers should be 20 minutes long; please send abstracts (250 words) of
proposals by 15 February 1999 (including details of audio-visual
requirements) to: 

     Dr Geoffrey Chew			Tel: 	+44-1784-443537
     Department of Music		Fax:  	+44-1784-439441
     Royal Holloway College		Email:	[log in to unmask]
	(University of London)
     Egham Hill
     Egham, Surrey TW20 0EX
     England





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