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The City as a ‘Miraculous Notebook’: Walks in Rome by Milada Součková. Towards an Aesthetics and Poetics of the Poetic Image
dc.contributor.authorVojvodík, Josef
dc.date.accessioned2019-12-17T11:48:19Z
dc.date.available2019-12-17T11:48:19Z
dc.date.issued2019
dc.identifier.issn2336-6680
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11956/115549
dc.language.isocs_CZcs_CZ
dc.publisherUniverzita Karlova, Filozofická fakultacs_CZ
dc.rights.urihttp://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/2.0/
dc.sourceSlovo a smysl - Word & Sense, 2019, 16, 32, 109-126cs_CZ
dc.source.urihttps://wordandsense.ff.cuni.cz
dc.subjectRomecs_CZ
dc.subjectNicolas Poussincs_CZ
dc.subjectGoethecs_CZ
dc.subjectTorquato Tassocs_CZ
dc.subjectintertextualitycs_CZ
dc.subjectrepetition and memorycs_CZ
dc.subjectnostalgiacs_CZ
dc.subjectŘímcs_CZ
dc.subjectintertextualitacs_CZ
dc.subjectopakování a paměťcs_CZ
dc.subjectnostalgiecs_CZ
dc.titleMěsto jako „zázračný zápisník“: Římské procházky Milady Součkové. K estetice a poetice básnického obrazucs_CZ
dc.title.alternativeThe City as a ‘Miraculous Notebook’: Walks in Rome by Milada Součková. Towards an Aesthetics and Poetics of the Poetic Imagecs_CZ
dc.typeVědecký článekcs_CZ
uk.abstract.enIn April 1960, Milada Součková left her exile in America on a trip to Rome, a trip that would inspire the poems collected in her fourth book of poems, Alla Romana, published in exile by a Roman publisher (1966). Součková’s time in Rome had a special significance for the poet — the poet in exile and the poet of exile — representing not only a return to Europe, but more importantly, a revitalizing return to the world-city of cultural memory. While the city’s architecture plays a leading role in Alla Romana, the city (and Italy as a whole) is also evoked by references to painters (Poussin, Angelika Kauffmann, Bronzino, Canaletto, etc.), direct intertextual quotes (Goethe, Chateaubriand, Stendhal, Byron, etc.), and indirect allusions (Ovid, Virgil, Dante, etc.). Součková’s ‘Roman’ poems thus fuse together past and present, real with imagined pictures, and actual sensory experience with aesthetic reflections in mirror-like complementarity. Sense impressions evoke memories, or set in motion aesthetic reflections and intertextual and intermedial relations, in dialogue with foreign texts and images. The city becomes a kind of ‘palimpsest’ and a Freudian ‘Mystic Writing Pad’ (Wunderblock), inscribed with experiences, impressions and memories. The actual architecture of the city, combined with other traces of past epochs, literary works and paintings, and transfigured into poetic images, is again made legible by an aesthetic staging within the poetic text. This poetic strategy is thematically exemplified by two poems: Torquato Tasso and U Via Appia.cs_CZ
uk.internal-typeuk_publication
dc.identifier.doi10.14712/23366680.2019.2.3cs_CZ
dc.description.startPage109
dc.description.endPage126
dcterms.isPartOf.nameSlovo a smysl - Word & Sensecs_CZ
dcterms.isPartOf.journalYear2019
dcterms.isPartOf.journalVolume16
dcterms.isPartOf.journalIssue32


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