ARTICLES Revenant Spirits in Slovak Folk Narrative Poems By Charles S. Kraszewski The Meaning of NATO Enlargement for the Former Czechoslovakia By Petr Andel Bonn’s Complex Relations with Washington as a Background for West German Policy towards Czechoslovakia in 1968 Read More …
kosmas-eichler
20.1 – Fall 2006: Table of Contents
AERCLES Formation of the Council of Free Czechoslovakia By Francis D. Raska Midwifery Education at Prague University in the Seventeenth and Early Eighteenth Centuries By Paul Shore Josef tkvoreckif’s Hidden Treasures: A Quest for His Aphorisms By Markets Goetz-Stankiewicz Jozef Read More …
19.2 – Spring 2006: Table of Contents
ARTICLES The Adventures of Voskovec and Werich in America, 1939-1945 By Jarka M. Burian They Wished to Combine the Spirit of Bohemia and America: Czech Women’s Clubs in Chicago, 1890-1940—the Liberal “Progressive” Type By Stepanka Magstadtova Valaska Skola (1755): What Read More …
18.1 – Fall 2004: Table of Contents
ARTICLES The American Lecture Tour of Vavro grobar and Vaclav Stanislav Maule in 1923 By Daniel E. Miller American Daily Newspaper Perceptions of the 1938 Munich Crisis By Gregory C. Ference Water or Steam Power? Mining in Central Slovakia From Read More …
17.2 – Spring 2004: Table of Contents
ARTICLES President Wilson, Professor Masaryk, and the Birth of By Betty Miller Unterberger American Czechs and Unrealized Projects By Z. S. Nenasheva Czech-American Periodicals By Alena Jaklova The Czech Song in Texas: Style and Text By John K. Novak Mining Read More …
17.1 – Fall 2003: Table of Contents
ARTICLES The Reception of Milan Kundera By Jean Bessiere A Journey of a Name from the Realm of Reference to the Realm of Meaning: The Reception of Milan Kundera within the Czech Cultural Context By Petr A. Bilek Milan Kundera’s Read More …
16.2 – Spring 2003: Table of Contents
ARTICLES Clementis’s Hat; or, Is Kundera a Palimpsest? By Peter Bugge A Very British Bohemian? The Reception of Milan Kundera and his Work in Great Britain By Michelle Woods “A Python Can Have Up to Three Tongues”: The Use of Read More …
16.1 – Fall 2002: Table of Contents
ARTICLES Imperial America in Adolf Loo’s Jubilee Church Project By Joseph Masheck Singing the Blues: Intertextuality in the Poetry of Ivan Blatny By Julie Hansen Language: The First Target of Assimilation By Roland A. Stiles Vaclav Alois Jung’s 1903 Novel Read More …
15.2 – Spring 2002: Table of Contents
ARTICLES The German Social Democratic Party of Czechoslovakia: From Abstention to Activism By Fred Hahn Rilke’s Non-Nationalism: A Bohemian Model By Jenifer Cushman Josef Vaclav Sladek (1845-1912) as an Interpreter and Example of the Czech-American Experience By David Z. Chroust Read More …
15.1 – Fall 2001: Table of Contents
ARTICLES Jan Hus — a Heretic, a Saint, or a Reformer? By Vilem Herold Political Portraiture: Karel Kramar as Others Saw Him Before World War I By Stanley B. Winters F.M. (Ladimir) Klacel: Teacher of Gregor Mendel By Margaret Hermanek Read More …