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Two Lessons in Literary Studies, or on the Slowness
dc.contributor.authorMálek, Petr
dc.date.accessioned2018-09-10T09:49:52Z
dc.date.available2018-09-10T09:49:52Z
dc.date.issued2018
dc.identifier.issn2336-6680
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11956/100809
dc.description.abstractDrawing on the considerations of Karlheinz Stierle, who claims that one of the key tasks in thinking about literature is to oppose the technical totality of modernity and its repressive mechanisms with the substantiality of the slow and the already past, this study aims — in the reading of Franz Kafka, for example, by German thinker, literary theorist and critic Walter Benjamin, and that of Karel Čapek by Czech literary historian and critic Jiří Opelík — to present a form of thinking about literature and its studies that would belong in some ways to the ‘slow reading culture’. At a time when the predominant view of the status of the discipline has grown skeptical, when one has come to doubt the meaning of literature, it is useful to return to the sources and principal questions that comprise our basic attitude towards literature and its study. The question of the current state of thought about literature is reflected here by the prism of slowness and the culture of slow reading, together with a study of literature that opens our way to something we might have otherwise abandoned in the ‘rhythm of constantly renewed acceleration’. The first part of the study, dedicated to Benjamin’s reading of Kafka, focuses on several motifs, grouped around the idea of study and the idea of the image. He develops his interpretation of Kafka’s short stories, The New Advocate, and his reading of the photographic portrait of little Kafka, by reflecting on Benjamin’s tendency to introduce the subject in a circular manner, and through a method of interpretation that gradually approaches, interrupts and postpones, the methodological equivalent to slow reading, revolves around the conviction that the center of the thinking about literature is the understanding of literary works, his open movement, which can never reach a culminating understanding. The second part of the study, devoted to Opelík’s reading of Karel Čapek, deals with the philological footprint and philological impulse in the literary-historical works of Jiří Opelík: at the epicenter of literary research he inserts the poetic word, which like the history of his stratification is also a model of the historicity of understanding and the experience of time slowing down. Slowness, in the context of Opelík’s Čapek, receives numerous synonyms, some immediately implied (continuity and stability), others emerging from his Čapek reading spontaneously (service), and still others seeming to suggest themselves: loyalty. Loyalty to the author, a service rendered not only to him but also to the readers, to ongoing research, to the constancy of the contemporary reader’s interest. Opelíkʼs methods remain an element of confidentiality in relation to the studied work, which is both first and last instance of understanding, confidentiality based on the slow experience of reading.en_US
dc.publisherUniverzita Karlova, Filozofická fakultacs_CZ
dc.rights.urihttp://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/2.0/
dc.sourceSlovo a smysl - Word & Sense, 2018, 15, 29, 13-56cs_CZ
dc.source.urihttps://wordandsense.ff.cuni.cz
dc.subjectWalter Benjamincs_CZ
dc.subjectFranz Kafkacs_CZ
dc.subjectJiří Opelíkcs_CZ
dc.subjectKarel Čapekcs_CZ
dc.subjectKarlheinz Stierlecs_CZ
dc.subjectTheodor W. Adornocs_CZ
dc.subjectRoland Barthescs_CZ
dc.subjectpomalostcs_CZ
dc.subjectstudiumcs_CZ
dc.subjectčtenícs_CZ
dc.subjectrozuměnícs_CZ
dc.subjectpodobenstvícs_CZ
dc.subjectobrazcs_CZ
dc.subjectfotografiecs_CZ
dc.subjectslovocs_CZ
dc.subjectbásníkcs_CZ
dc.subjectfilologiecs_CZ
dc.subjectkomentářcs_CZ
dc.subjectintertextualitacs_CZ
dc.subjectWalter Benjaminen_US
dc.subjectFranz Kafkaen_US
dc.subjectJiří Opelíken_US
dc.subjectKarel Čapeken_US
dc.subjectKarlheinz Stierleen_US
dc.subjectTheodor W. Adornoen_US
dc.subjectRoland Barthesen_US
dc.subjectslownessen_US
dc.subjectstudyen_US
dc.subjectreadingen_US
dc.subjectunderstandingen_US
dc.subjectparableen_US
dc.subjectpictureen_US
dc.subjectPhotographyen_US
dc.subjectpoeten_US
dc.subjectphilologyen_US
dc.subjectcommentaryen_US
dc.subjectintertextualityen_US
dc.titleDvě lekce studia literatury aneb o pomalostics_CZ
dc.typeVědecký článekcs_CZ
dc.typeResearch Articleen_US
dc.title.translatedTwo Lessons in Literary Studies, or on the Slownessen_US
uk.internal-typeuk_publication
dc.description.startPage13
dc.description.endPage56
dcterms.isPartOf.nameSlovo a smysl - Word & Sensecs_CZ
dcterms.isPartOf.journalYear2018
dcterms.isPartOf.journalVolume15
dcterms.isPartOf.journalIssue29


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