Two hundred years in the struggle to interpret the medieval Czech farce

Authors

STEHLÍKOVÁ Eva

Year of publication 2013
MU Faculty or unit

Faculty of Arts

Citation
Description The article Two hundred years in the struggle to interpret the medieval Czech sacred farce strives to contribute to the first proposed topic of the conference, Legacy of the Past and New Approaches. Two fragments of Czech medieval farce Unguentarius or the Ointment Seller rank among the most frequently interpreted texts from the early Czech literature, being commented by scholars in a wide variety of fields have commented substantively to in. The essay represents the recapitulation of a process of understanding the play where secular and liturgical elements are intermixed from the moment of its discovery in 1822 till this time as a reception of the temporal discourse with a special regard to the significance of the work of R. Jacobson and J. Veltrusky Two fragments of Czech medieval farce Unguentarius or the Ointment Seller rank among the most frequently interpreted texts from the early Czech literature, being commented by scholars in a wide variety of fields have commented substantively to in. The essay represents the recapitulation of a process of understanding the play where secular and liturgical elements are intermixed from the moment of its discovery in 1822 till this time as a reception of the temporal discourse with a special regard to the significance of the work of R. Jacobson and J. Veltrusky.
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