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ARTICLES

PAGE

ABSTRACTS
KEYWORDS
CONTACTS

Daniel Topinka, Dušan Lužný and Jana Korečková

The Assimilation of Post-War Generations of Czech Immigrants in Chicago

9

Miloš Blahút 

A Long and Winding Road from Narrator to Character: A Stylistic Analysis of Tom Robbins’ novel Fierce Invalids Home from Hot Climates

21

Tetiana Grebeniuk  

Narrative Unreliability in Paula Hawkins’ The Girl on the Train as a Strategy of Reader Immersion 

36

Katarina Labudova

Hungry for Truth and (Hi)story: Images of Food in Alias Grace by Margaret Atwood

49

Loran Gami

History matters (?) Various Ways of Looking at History in Graham Swift’s Waterland

64

Tereza Topolovská

The Poetics of the Constructed Environment in J.G. Ballard’s High-Rise

76

Ladislav Vít  

Landscape as a Benchmark: Poetics of Place as a Critical Tool in W.H. Auden’s Prose

87

Martina Kastnerová

“Constant Art”: Concept of Love in Poetry of Mary Wroth in Dialogue with the Male Poetic Tradition
100

   

STUDENT CONTRIBUTION

Žaneta Stýblová

The Role of Setting in the Golden Age Detective Novel
115

 

BOOK REVIEW

   

Ivona Mišterová       

A Multiplicity of Voices in Grace Nichols’s Work (Review of Grace Nichols Universal and Diverse: Ethnicity in the Poetry of Grace Nichols by Pavlína Flajšarová)

 
     
 
     

 

 



ABSTRACTS, KEYWORDS AND CONTACT DETAILS



Author

Daniel Topinka, Dušan Lužný and Jana Korečková

Title of the Article

The Assimilation of Post-War Generations of Czech Immigrants in Chicago

Abstract

This paper presents the results of the research conducted since 2013 in the Czech immigrant community in Chicago. The case of Czech immigration is particularly interesting, as it can be considered a textbook example of successful assimilation. Czechs had arrived in Chicago as early as mid-19th century. During the 20th and 21st centuries, there have been several waves of Czech immigration, usually connected to political as well as economic situations in Czechoslovakia or later the Czech Republic. The research methodology is based mainly on participatory observations and interviews. The research sample includes respondents from different migration waves, especially political immigrants after 1948 and 1968 who have legal status, as well as post-1989 immigrants whose choice to migrate was largely non-political and mostly economic. Czech immigration can generally be characterized by very strong and relatively fast assimilation across generations.

Keywords

assimilation; Czech immigration; Czech diaspora; generation; Chicago

Contact

Department of Sociology, Andragogy and Cultural Anthropology

Faculty of Arts

Palacký University in Olomouc

tr. Svobody 26

779 00, Olomouc

Czech Republic

daniel.topinka@upol.cz

dusan.luzny@upol.cz

jana.koreckova@upol.cz

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Author

Miloš Blahút

Title of the Article

A Long and Winding Road from Narrator to Character: A Stylistic Analysis of Tom Robbins’ novel Fierce Invalids Home from
Hot Climates

Abstract

Tom Robbins’ novel Fierce Invalids Home from Hot Climates (2000) provides a plethora of ways to obtain an
insight into his characters’ minds and learn about their feelings and emotions by means of certain techniques of
representing speech, thought, and perception, namely free indirect speech/thought, narrative report of thought act,
and substitutionary perception/free indirect perception, to name but a few. The aim of this paper is to demarcate
the boundaries between those modes of representation and through stylistic analysis to pinpoint examples of
mode of representation which both reflect characters’ thoughts and perceptions, while at the same time reveal
the narrator’s creativity while constructing the fictional world of the novel.

Keywords

Free indirect discourse; overt narrator; speech and thought representation; Tom Robbins; Fierce Invalids Home from Hot Climates

Contact

Inštitút anglistiky a amerikanistiky

Filozofická fakulta
Prešovská univerzita v Prešove
Ulica 17. novembra 15
080 01 Prešov
milos.blahut@unipo.sk

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Author

Tetiana Grebeniuk

Title of the Article

Narrative Unreliability in Paula Hawkins’ The Girl on the Train as a Strategy of Reader Immersion 

Abstract

This paper considers the narratological phenomenon of unreliable narration in the novel The Girl on the Train by Paula Hawkins, concentrating on mechanisms of reader perception. Starting with a survey of the main contemporary definitions of unreliable narration as well as sources of unreliability, the article moves to the problem of how unreliable narration can influence a reader of the analysed text, discussing ways in which unreliability combines with other aspects of the narrative. The effect of unreliable narration on the reader is examined in terms of recipient immersion. The disclosure of unreliable statments, the search for truth hidden beneath the cover of narration, along with the recuperation of the “reliability” of the narrator are viewed as supplementary objects of the reader’s interest during text perception. Attention is focused on two components of reader gratification as manifest in Hawkins’ novel: intellectual satisfaction due to the solution of the murder mystery (temporal immersion), as well as satisfaction resulting from the protagonist’s psychic recovery and revenge (emotional immersion). The last section of the paper compares the reader’s perception of the novel with the viewer’s reactions to a screen version directed by Tate Taylor.  

Keywords

unreliable narrator; narrative; the reader; immersion; sources of unreliability

Contact

Department of Culture and Ukrainian Studies  

International Faculty No.1

Zaporizhzhia State Medical University

Stalevarov Street, 31-a

Zaporizhzhia, 69035, Ukraine

Ukraine

s_gtv@ukr.net

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Author

Katarina Labudova

Title of the Article

Hungry for Truth and (Hi)story: Images of Food in Alias Grace by Margaret Atwood

Abstract

Alias Grace is a historiographic metafiction written by Margaret Atwood in 1996 about Grace Marks, imprisoned for double murder. The style of the novel is a convincing reconstruction of the Victorian historical novel because of authentic descriptions of 19th century Canadian households and domestic life and its regular meals. The food motif is a vivid undercurrent in Alias Grace just as it is in Atwood’s other novels. Images of food intensify the realistic portrait of Canada, however, the food operates on a deeper, symbolic level: images of food, eating, and hunger are often interwoven with the power and class injustice. The analysis shows that hunger is not only physical experience and a hard fact of prisoner’s life but it can be metaphorical, manifested as hunger for truth and story. The article argues that imprisoned Grace controls her hunger to usurp responsibility for her story. It also illustrates that women are constantly associated with food and edibles and thus it points to related issues of cannibalism and power struggles. Although the motifs of food, eating and cannibalism have been discussed by numerous critics including Sarah Sceats, Heidi Darroch, and Sharon Rose Wilson, this article extends their research by exploring Atwood’s strategies of writing and storytelling using food images. The article examines Atwood’s postmodern technique of cooking up the Alias Grace from many historical texts and using genre fiction ingredients.

Keywords

Margaret Atwood; Alias Grace; cannibalism; eating; food; historiographic metafiction

Contact

Department of English Language and Literature

Faculty of Arts and Letters

Catholic University in Ruzomberok

Hrabovska cesta 1A
034 01  Ružomberok
Slovakia

katarina.labudova@ku.sk

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Author

Loran Gami

Title of the Article

History matters (?) Various Ways of Looking at History in Graham Swift’s Waterland

Abstract

The paper focuses on how history is dealt with in Waterland, one of Graham Swift’s best-known novels. Even though the novel is not a pamphlet on the philosophy of history, it however explores the many ways in which history is indispensable for people in their endeavors to make sense of their past and their identity. However, Waterland presents different views of history and story-telling, which are often opposite and undermine one another. The paper will discuss how the novel, at times, suggests that tracing and reconstructing the past is a possible and objective activity, while, at other times, seeming to side with the idea that the past cannot be retrieved and that History is but an arbitrary ordering and construction of facts from the past, which are in themselves disorderly and structureless. In this regard, the novel has often been considered as taking part in the postmodernist debate about the truth in History. The article also deals with the contradictory perspective of History explored in Swift’s novel: that of History as a “Grand Narrative” of Progress and the opposite view of History as cyclical and regressive.  

Keywords

History; identity; narrative; amnesia; curiosity; postmodernism

Contact

Department of English

Faculty of Foreign Languages

University of Tirana

Rruga e Elbasanit

Tirana, Albania

lorangami@gmail.com

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Author

Tereza Topolovská

Title of the Article

The Poetics of the Constructed Environment in J.G. Ballard’s High-Rise

Abstract

This article analyses major constituents of the poetics of the constructed environment in James Graham Ballard’s novel High-Rise (1975). The novel’s high-rise is contextualised within the framework of contemporary architectural development as well as Ballard’s overall work, with its particular emphasis on novels dealing with prototypically modern urban constructions. The interpretation of Ballard’s narrative seeks to examine the chief aspects of the space of the tower block as well as the tenants’ response to it. The paper endeavours to highlight the author’s tendency to examine the interconnected relationships between humans and contemporary architectural structures in his fiction.

Keywords

J.G. Ballard; poetics of space; architecture in literature; high-rise; alienation

Contact

Department of English Language and Literature

Faculty of Education

Charles University

Celetná 13

110 00 Prague

Czech Republic

tereza.topolovska@pedf.cuni.cz

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Author

Ladislav Vít   

Title of the Article

Landscape as a Benchmark: Poetics of Place as a Critical Tool in W.H. Auden’s Prose

Abstract

W.H. Auden had a profound and clearly defined spatial awareness. As an editor of anthologies, Professor of Poetry at Oxford and author of essays, reviews, forewords and introductions, he was also prolific in the profession of a literary critic judging the work of others. This paper traces the connections between these two facets, with a special emphasis on Auden’s readiness to use other writers’ topophilic responsiveness to the physical environment and landscape as a benchmark for assessing their qualities. Focusing on Auden’s critical assessment of Wordsworth, Frost, Betjeman and Rilke on the basis of their poetics of place, the present study examines Auden’s implementation of this criterion in his critical method. 

Keywords

W.H. Auden; poetics of place; landscape; topophilia; criticism; William Wordsworth; Robert Frost

Contact

Department of English and American Studies

Faculty of Arts and Philosophy

University of Pardubice

Studentská 84

532 10 Pardubice

Czech Republic

Ladislav.vit@upce.cz

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Author

Martina Kastnerová   

Title of the Article

“Constant Art”: Concept of Love in Poetry of Mary Wroth in Dialogue with the Male Poetic Tradition

Abstract

The paper intends to analyse development of the literary representation of women in Elizabethan and Jacobean culture, forming an integral part of female authorship during this period, especially on the basis of Mary Wrothʼs poetry in the dialogue with the male poetic tradition (William Herbert, William Shakespeare). However, instead of taking aim at the male view, the genius of Wroth is to absorb it and use it for her own ends. Reclaiming the virtues of the woman through constancy, she upends the conventional views of the woman. Thus, Wroth strengthens the autonomy of the woman by allowing her to make the decision to accept a role subordinate to man.

Keywords

Lady Mary Wroth; Literary Culture; Elizabethan Renaissance; Jacobean Court; William Herbert, Third Earl of Pembroke; Philip Sidney; William Shakespeare

Contact

Department of of Philosophy

University of West Bohemia

Riegrova 11/217

306 14 Pilsen

Czech Republic

E-mail: kastnerm@kfi.zcu.cz

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Author

The Role of Setting in the Golden Age Detective Novel

Title of the Article

The Role of Setting in the Golden Age Detective Novel

Abstract

Analyses of crime fiction often focus on the plot, characters and their social positioning but tend to pay much less attention to the actual setting. Employing the concept of active and passive relationships of setting and plot, G. J. Demko’s notion of cultural and physical space as well as other theories of literary representation of place, the article discusses the role of setting in the Golden Age crime fiction, namely in Agatha Christie’s The Mysterious Affair at Styles and Third Girl

Keywords

Setting; space; crime fiction; detective novel; Golden Age; The Mysterious Affair at Styles; Third Girl

Contact

Department of English and American Studies

University of Pardubice

Studentská 84

zaneta.styblova@student.upce.cz

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