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The Prague School: Selected Writings, 1929-1946 - University of Texas Press Slavic Series
Peter Steiner
The Prague School: Selected Writings, 1929-1946 - University of Texas Press Slavic Series
Peter Steiner
Essays by noted figures in the Prague Linguistic Circle.
Publisher Marketing: The Prague Linguistic Circle came into being on the afternoon of October 6, 1926, when five Czech and Russian linguists gathered to hear a lecture by a German colleague. From this international beginning, the interests of the group grew to first encompass language in all its functional heterogeneity and then finally all of culture, which the Circle conceived of as a structure of sign systems. Semiotics was thus the overarching discipline for the Prague School, serving to organize all phenomena shared and exchanged by a cultural community. In recent years increasing attention has been paid to the importance of the Prague School, but writing about it has frequently been marred by misconceptions. The central aim of this volume is to correct those misconceptions and to present the diversity of interests within the Prague School - literary criticism, linguistics, theory of theater, folklore, and philosophy. These essays by Bogatyrev, Jakobson, Karcevskij, Muka ovsk, Rieger, Vodi ka, and Honzl are here translated into English for the first time. Some have a special historical value in illuminating critical stages of structuralist thinking; others reveal the timeliness of the School's contributions for the theoretical conflicts of our day. Each essay is accompanied by an informative introductory note, and the whole is followed by the editor's Postscript, tracing the roots of structuralist aesthetics. The Prague Linguistic Circle came into being on the afternoon of October 6, 1926, when five Czech and Russian linguists gathered to hear a lecture by a German colleague. From this international beginning, the interests of the group grew to first encompass language in all its functional heterogeneity and then finally all of culture, which the Circle conceived of as a structure of sign systems. Semiotics was thus the overarching discipline for the Prague School, serving to organize all phenomena shared and exchanged by a cultural community. In recent years increasing attention has been paid to the importance of the Prague School, but writing about it has frequently been marred by misconceptions. The central aim of this volume is to correct those misconceptions and to present the diversity of interests within the Prague School--literary criticism, linguistics, theory of theater, folklore, and philosophy. These essays by Bogatyrev, Jakobson, Karcevskij, Mukarovsky, Rieger, Vodicka, and Honzl are here translated into English for the first time. Some have a special historical value in illuminating critical stages of structuralist thinking; others reveal the timeliness of the School's contributions for the theoretical conflicts of our day. Each essay is accompanied by an informative introductory note, and the whole is followed by the editor's Postscript, tracing the roots of structuralist aesthetics.
Contributor Bio: Steiner, Peter Peter Steiner is an independent photographer based in Austria. As newcomer and autodidact in the visual arts, he has never learned to submit to the rules of the trade. He does not follow the herd, but rather searches for his own path to break creative barriers. His artistic work focuses on candid street portraiture and staged portraiture with a very natural appeal. He produces both color and black/white photography work.
Media | Books Paperback Book (Book with soft cover and glued back) |
Released | March 1, 1982 |
ISBN13 | 9780292741867 |
Publishers | University of Texas Press |
Pages | 232 |
Dimensions | 152 × 229 × 14 mm · 454 g |
Editor | Steiner, Peter |
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