The Slavonic world does exist: disintegration, negation, revival or the search for the slavonic identity

Vol.19,No.2(2016)

Abstract
The author of the present study analyses the legitimacy of the holistic conception of the Slavonic world as a compact language, literary, cultural, and political cluster, and demonstrates its modifications at the example of several studies, monographs, and scholarly volumes dealing with various events: the Cyrillus and Methodius mission and the role of Old Church Slavonic, a work of Roman Jakobson, the editions and books by a Czech-German historian Eva Hahnová, the works of M. C. Putna, the Brno-Belgrade volume on the First World War, and the volume on the exhibition of Soviet art in Prague in 1947. The Slavonic world and its self-identification represent an important component of the tens of themes getting again in to the epicentre of the scholarly activity. This is inspiring for Slavonic studies, revitalizes it ssubject, dynamizes it presenting Slavonic studies as a sphere of research which has an increasing importance.

Keywords:
the holistic conception of Slavonic studies and the Slavonic world; the role of Cyrillus and Methodius mission and Old Church Slavonic; several publications reflecting the Slavonic phenomenon; selfidentification of the Slavonic world as an important component of world Slavonic studies

Pages:
13–32
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